logo
New generation of Afghan women shift from burqa to abaya

New generation of Afghan women shift from burqa to abaya

Khaleej Times19-03-2025

Young, urban women in Afghanistan are increasingly ditching the all-enveloping blue burqa with a face mesh that has become a symbol of the Taliban's oppression of women.
Since their return to power in 2021, the Taliban have imposed strict law, modelled on their previous rule from 1996 to 2001.
But while women must still have their bodies and faces covered, restrictions from the feared religious police do not specifically mention the burqa.
So young women are instead following fashions seen in many Gulf nations.
Many prefer a flowing abaya robe, worn with a hijab headscarf and often a face covering as well -- sometimes a medical mask, or a Saudi-style cloth niqab veil that exposes only the eyes.
"The new generation would never accept wearing a burqa, because of the design and colour," said 23-year-old Tahmina Adel in the capital Kabul.
With social media, "everybody follows the trends", Adel added, who was forced to quit her economics degree because of the Taliban government's ban on women's education.
"I prefer wearing an abaya because I am comfortable in that," she said.
Young women in Kabul and the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif said that abayas and headscarves offer more freedom of expression than burqas, with a variation in colour, material and pattern.
"Only elders wear a burqa," said Razia Khaliq, as she embroidered one at a workshop in Mazar-i-Sharif.
Khaliq began wearing the billowing head-to-toe burqa aged 13, like her mother and grandmother before her.
But her daughter, in her 20s, prefers the abaya.
"Young people wear the abaya because it is more comfortable," Khaliq said.
'Stifling'
The burqa has long roots in Afghanistan.
It was strictly enforced during the first Taliban government rule of Afghanistan, when women were lashed for failing to wear one in public.
But the abaya and hijab headscarf combination grew in popularity during the time of the foreign-backed government.
When the Taliban recaptured Kabul in 2021, they had promised to be more flexible than during their first rule, when women were deprived of almost all their rights.
They have gradually erased Afghan women from public space, imposing what the United Nations has called a "gender apartheid".
They outlawed the loose headscarves commonly worn by urban women.
Billboards were erected ordering women to once again wear the burqa -- or an abaya, headscarf and a face covering.
A law in August confirmed restrictions imposed on men and women by the religious police.
It stipulates that, while women can go out "in case of necessity", they must cover up.
"Whether a burqa or hijab, there is no difference," said Saif ul Islam Khyber, spokesman for the morality police, known officially as the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice.
Nasima, in her 40s, insisted that "showing your face is a sin".
But she admitted to sometimes wearing an abaya and headscarf to free her nose and mouth from the "stifling" burqa.
'Very strange'
Niha, 22, said she was reprimanded for not wearing a burqa in public buildings, which are guarded by the Taliban authority's security forces.
It is common to be asked to readjust the headscarf, or ordered to add a medical mask.
"As soon as we enter offices, we are mistreated," said Niha, who did not give her surname.
Hayatullah Rafiqi, a specialist in Pashtun culture, said the burqa was "strictly imposed" under the first Taliban government -- when some women were "whipped if they did not wear it" -- but that "today it is worn less."
Burqas vary only in colour according to province, from blue to light brown, and green to pink.
Gul Mohammad has been selling burqas in Kabul for 40 years, and said many now come from China -- made of nylon rather than cotton, making them cheaper and stronger but less breathable.
"The Chinese burqa is very cold in winter, and it is like fire in summer," said Gul. "This makes the women sweat."
For Sabrina, 23, from the Taliban's spiritual cradle of Kandahar, life under a burqa is fraught with pitfalls.
She is regularly lectured if she does not wear it.
The first time she wore it was after the Taliban government seized back control in 2021, and it was not her choice.
"I couldn't see my way, I didn't know if I was going right or left," she said. "It was very strange."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Colombian presidential candidate successfully underwent surgery after shooting: Mayor
Colombian presidential candidate successfully underwent surgery after shooting: Mayor

Al Etihad

time16 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

Colombian presidential candidate successfully underwent surgery after shooting: Mayor

8 June 2025 12:41 Bogotá (AFP)A prominent Colombian presidential candidate who was shot during a campaign event in Bogota has successfully undergone initial surgery, the city's mayor said on Senator Miguel Uribe was speaking to supporters in the capital when a gunman shot him twice in the head and once in the knee before being detained.A security guard managed to detain the suspected attacker, a minor who is believed to be 15 years was airlifted to hospital in "critical condition" and underwent a "neurosurgical" and "peripheral vascular procedure," the Santa Fe Clinic in Bogota "overcame the first surgical procedure," Bogota mayor Carlos Fernando Galan told media, adding that he had entered "the critical hours" of wife, in an audio recording shared with media, said "he came out well from the surgery.""He fought the first battle and fought it well. He is fighting for his life," she is heard from the scene of the shooting showed Uribe slumped against the hood of a white car, smeared with blood, as a group of men tried to hold him and stop the suspect was injured in the affray and was receiving treatment, said police director Carlos Fernando others -- a man and a woman -- were also wounded, and a Glock-style firearm was seized."Our hearts are broken, Colombia hurts," Carolina Gomez, a 41-year-old businesswoman, told AFP as she prayed with candles for Uribe's health. 'Day of pain' The motive for the attack is not yet publicly known. Colombia's defense minister Pedro Sanchez vowed to use law enforcement's full capabilities and offered a roughly $725,000 reward for information about who was behind the a video address to the nation posted on social media, President Gustavo Petro also promised investigations to find the perpetrators of the "day of pain"."What matters most today is that all Colombians focus with the energy of our hearts, with our will to live ... on ensuring that Dr Miguel Uribe stays alive."In an earlier statement, Petro condemned the violence as "an attack not only against his person, but also against democracy, freedom of thought, and the legitimate exercise of politics in Colombia."The shooting was similarly condemned across the political spectrum and from overseas, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio calling it "a direct threat to democracy."Uribe, a strong critic of Petro, is a member of the Democratic Center party, which announced last October his intention to run in the 2026 presidential said there was no specific threat made against the politician before the incident. Like many public figures in Colombia, Uribe had close personal country is home to several armed guerrilla groups, powerful cartels and has a long history of political violence. Shot 'from behind' Uribe is the son of Diana Turbay, a famed Colombian journalist who was killed after being kidnapped by Pablo Escobar's Medellin of his grandfathers was president Julio Cesar Turbay, who led the country from 1978 to gathered outside the Bogota hospital, lighting candles as they prayed for his party said in a statement Saturday that an "armed individual" had shot the senator from has been a senator since 2022. He previously served as Bogota's government secretary and city councilor. He also ran for city mayor in 2019, but lost that election.

World leaders head to France for UN summit on ocean threats
World leaders head to France for UN summit on ocean threats

Al Etihad

time19 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

World leaders head to France for UN summit on ocean threats

8 June 2025 09:54 NICE (AFP)World leaders are expected to descend on the French Riviera Sunday ahead of a high-level summit to tackle a deepening crisis in the oceans driven by overfishing, climate change and United Nations says oceans face an "emergency", and leaders gathering in Nice will be under pressure to commit much-needed money and stronger protections for the ailing seas and the people that depend on UN Ocean Conference must try to turn a corner as nations feud over deep-sea mining, plastic litter, and exploitative fishing, against a backdrop of wider geopolitical 50 heads of state and government are expected to attend, including Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and his Argentine counterpart Javier President Emmanuel Macron is expected to sail to Nice from Monaco, where he is attending a related event aimed at raising private capital for ocean conservation. He will be joined on the shimmering Mediterranean Sea by other vessels in a colourful maritime parade, before touring an exhibition centre on land transformed into the cavernous belly of a whale. Later that evening, Macron will host leaders for a dinner of Mediterranean fish ahead of the summit's formal opening on has deployed 5,000 police to the heritage-listed city where scientists, business leaders and environmental activists are also attending in big numbers.A strong turnout is also expected from Pacific Island nations, whose delegations will demand greater financial assistance to fight the rising seas, marine trash, and plunder of fisheries that threatens their very US under President Donald Trump -- whose recent push to fast-track seabed mining in international waters sparked global outrage -- is not expected to send a have warned the summit -- which will not produce a legally binding agreement -- risks being a talk fest unless leaders come armed with concrete proposals for restoring marine among these is securing the missing finance to get anywhere near protecting 30 percent of the world's oceans by 2030, a globally agreed far, only around eight percent of oceans are designated marine conservation zones and even less are considered truly says at this rate, it could take another 82 years to reach the 30 percent a boost this week, Samoa declared 30 percent of its national waters under protection with the creation of nine new marine parks. Conservationists hope others at Nice will follow has also been a concerted push for nations, including France, to ban bottom trawling -- a destructive fishing method that indiscriminately scrapes the ocean Saturday, Macron told the Ouest-France newspaper that bottom trawling would be restricted in some national marine protected closer toward the numbers required to ratify a global treaty on harmful fishing subsidies, and another on high seas protection, will also be a summit priority. On Sunday, an expert scientific panel will hand Macron a list of recommendations for leaders at the summit, including pausing seabed exploration when so little is known about the deep oceans.

Mohammed bin Salman condemns Israel's war on Gaza in Eid message
Mohammed bin Salman condemns Israel's war on Gaza in Eid message

Middle East Eye

timea day ago

  • Middle East Eye

Mohammed bin Salman condemns Israel's war on Gaza in Eid message

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has used his Eid al-Adha address to denounce Israel's war on Gaza and renew calls for a peaceful resolution for the Palestinian people. 'Eid al-Adha comes this year while the suffering of our brothers in Palestine continues as a result of the Israeli aggression,' he said during his remarks. He urged the international community to act, saying it must 'end the disastrous repercussions of this aggression, protect civilians and innocents, and create a new reality in which Palestine enjoys peace.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store