
Afghan women feel forgotten by world after four years of ‘war' waged by Taliban on their rights
On 8 January, Taliban officials detained Shahbaneh over a social media post ruing the fate of her family's young women, who would no longer be able to attend school. Nooran shows The Independent the Facebook post her mother had made, commenting on the local school's notice that it was shutting down due to a lack of teachers and resources.
She wrote in her post: "Forgive me, my daughter, for what we have done to you. We cannot escape this savage group.' Within a few hours, she received a message telling her: 'Remove your message because you have insulted the Taliban. This is the order of the Commander of the Faithful.'
The next day, two Taliban men arrived in Ford Ranger pick-up trucks in their busy neighbourhood in Herat and summoned Shahbaneh. 'They then took my mother away,' Nooran says, sitting alongside her in a video call from Afghanistan late in the evening. They fall quiet as a motorbike passes by outside, afraid they might be overheard.
Friday marks four years since the Taliban swept to power in Afghanistan, seizing Kabul from a democratically-elected government after the shambolic withdrawal of Nato forces.
Since 2021 the Taliban have announced around 100 edicts restricting the movement of girls and women through society, arresting women for having ill-fitting head scarves, speaking on social media and being out in public. Despite claiming it would not return to its hardline rule of the 1990s, not a single one of these edicts has been overturned, according to the UN assistance mission for Afghanistan (Unama).
More than 78 per cent of Afghan women are no longer in education, employment or training, the UN said this month in its report. The edicts are also a matter of life and death in areas of the health sector, with a shortage of female healthcare workers allowed to treat women patients. 'The results are devastating. Women are living shorter, less healthy lives,' the Unama said.
The Taliban does not hesitate in enforcing its rules by arresting and detaining women who break them – placing them in prisons where abuse is commonplace. The Independent heard repeated claims that women are raped by guards in these facilities, allegations which are difficult to verify.
'At night, I saw the Taliban prisons where the basic living conditions are horrible, guards coming in and taking the women away at night. Next day, the women would tell us they were raped,' Shahbaneh says. 'They tied my hands to my head, and beat me up till I cried, telling me that they will kill me if I continue to speak about education of girls and women,' she says.
Shahbaneh narrated the basic conditions of prison treatment under the Taliban, consistent with multiple other accounts of arrested men and women. 'There will be no food, no water, you are locked away in a dark room for days and nights. There isn't even a window for feeling any air on your face – that is the punishment you get for crossing the Taliban,' the 37-year-old former teacher says.
'As a punishment, many women who shared the cell with me were asked to clean the prison floor,' she said.
She was released after a month on 8 February this year, still with her only 'crime' being a social media post criticising the most basic violation of human rights.
Recounting her pain – and expressing disbelief that the world is turning a blind eye – she says: 'We are in danger for even breathing and existing as women. It is like the world cannot hear our voices, like they hate Afghan women.'
The restrictions on all aspects of women's lives seem only to be tightening, with the number of punishments over hijab regulations growing. In certain parts of Afghanistan including Herat province, women have been ordered to wear a chador, a full body covering, and are banned from going out in public if they fail to do so.
Unama says the Taliban have asked health clinics and private businesses to strictly refuse services to women who are not accompanied by a male chaperone, a mehram.
Asma, a 27-year-old who has been offering discreet legal advice to women in Kabul, says that the options available to women in her field of divorce and domestic violence cases have become bleak.
'Me and my colleagues who are working with women seeking divorce over domestic violence from their husbands face two hellish choices – go back to their abusive husband or face prison time. Surprisingly, the women are choosing to go to prison,' the young legal adviser told The Independent.
'In the prison, many are facing rape and physical assault.'
The Independent has reached out to the Taliban's ministry of interior for a comment on these allegations about its prison system, but had not received a response at the time of publication.
Sadly, the allegations are hardly new – dire accounts of ill treatment from women who have left Taliban detention have been a constant feature of the past four years.
Julia Parsi, a former Afghan teacher turned prominent human rights defender who burned a photo of the Taliban's supreme leader Mullah Hibatullah in 2022, lost hearing in one of her ears after being slapped by several Taliban officials in prison.
'I was subjected to severe psychological and physical pressure. The psychological torture was far worse than the physical abuse. They threatened me with harm to my family, especially my young daughters. The interrogations were filled with threats, insults, and humiliation,' the exiled Afghan activist told The Independent. She had to be hospitalised after her release from e prison in December 2022.
Parsi, now out of Afghanistan after facing death threats but continuing to work for Afghan women rights, says women are being rounded up and put behind the bars for 'opposing the Taliban's policies'.
'In recent arrests, the Taliban have primarily targeted women who have raised their voices on social media or participated in civic and political activities. Even women who have spoken only in small gatherings or taught lessons in their homes have been arrested under the accusation of 'opposing Taliban policies',' Parsi said, adding 'improper hijab' has been the biggest reason in recent weeks for the arrest of Afghan girls and women.
''Improper hijab' is merely an excuse — the real purpose is to suppress and silence women,' she says.
Such 'policies' are having a profound effect on a generation of women – 62 per cent of Afghan women now feel they cannot even influence decisions at home, let alone have their voices or faces be seen outside, according to a UN survey.
Zubaida Akbar, an Afghan human rights expert and programme manager at Femena, an organisation that supports human rights defenders, said that the Taliban have tortured women with physical abuse including rape and sexual assault, alongside mental abuse and ethnic slurs.
'In terms of the ways that the Taliban have degraded women, women activists detailed to us physical abuse, assault, beatings inside the prison, sexual abuse, lack of access to food, sanitation, not being able to sleep, interrogations, especially late at night,' Akbar told The Independent.
'In the cases where women are abducted from their homes, I don't say arrested because the Taliban are not the government, they don't have a legal system – none of [what] has happened, happens legally. Women are abducted from their homes or from the streets,' Akbar said, calling on the international community to do more to protect Afghan women.
'The world must pay attention, first and foremost. They need to pressure the Taliban to end their war on the women of Afghanistan and reverse all of the 130 edicts that the Taliban have issued against women.'
Even when they leave prison, women told The Independent that the experience robbed them of their sense of security in their communities, and they feared stepping out of their homes.
'When my mother goes out of the house, her heart is always beating, worried that someone will attack her. With every step, she is always looking behind her while walking. A few days back, my mother's friend asked her, 'Why are you looking behind you so much?'. My mother just stood there in silence, afraid of confessing her fears,' Nooran said.
But her ordeal has not broken Shahbaneh's spirit. She says she plans to demonstrate again on Friday against the Taliban.
'I am going to protest again on 15 August to mark my refusal to accept them as our leaders,' she says. 'This does not end, my fight will continue to free my daughter from the Taliban's grip.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
a few seconds ago
- Scottish Sun
Body of missing man, 27, found in Scots river after frantic search
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BODY has been recovered from a Scots river a massive search that was sparked yesterday. Police, ambulance and special operations teams scrambled to the River Tay in Perth last night. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 A major search operation was launched Credit: Michael Schofield 3 A man's body was recovered from the water Credit: Michael Schofield 3 The alarm was raised last night Credit: Michael Schofield The alarm was raised at around 7.45pm after police received reports of three men in difficulty in the water. Two men were then traced and the pair were checked over by Scottish Ambulance Service. Sadly Police Scotland have now confirmed the body of the missing 27-year-old has been found. Police are currently working to identify the man who died. A Police Scotland spokesperson said: "The body of a man has been recovered following searches in the water it the Moncreiffe Island area of Perth. "Emergency services remain in attendance and enquiries are ongoing to establish the identity of the man." More to follow... For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Scottish Sun. is your go to destination for the best celebrity news, football news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video. Like us on Facebook at and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheScottishSun.


North Wales Chronicle
9 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Afghan women barred from Taliban takeover anniversary celebrations in Kabul
Some 10,000 men gathered across the capital Kabul to watch Defence Ministry helicopters scatter flowers to the crowds below. Three of the six 'flower shower' locations were already off-limits to women because they have been prohibited from entering parks and recreational areas since November 2022. The Taliban seized Afghanistan on August 15 2021 as the US and Nato withdrew their forces at the end of a two-decade war. Since then, they have imposed their interpretation of Islamic law on daily life, including sweeping restrictions on women and girls, based on edicts from their leader Hibatullah Akhundzada. Friday's anniversary programme, which also comprised speeches from key cabinet members, was only for men. An outdoor sports performance, initially expected to feature Afghan athletes, did not take place. Rights groups, foreign governments and the UN have condemned the Taliban for their treatment of women and girls, who remain barred from education beyond sixth grade, many jobs, and most public spaces. Members of the United Afghan Women's Movement for Freedom staged an indoor protest on Friday in north-east Takhar province against Taliban rule. 'This day marked the beginning of a black domination that excluded women from work, education, and social life,' the movement said in a statement shared with The Associated Press. 'We, the protesting women, remember this day not as a memory, but as an open wound of history, a wound that has not yet healed. The fall of Afghanistan was not the fall of our will. We stand, even in the darkness.' There was also an indoor protest in the Pakistani capital Islamabad. Afghan women held up signs that said 'Forgiving the Taliban is an act of enmity against humanity' and 'August 15th is a dark day.' The women were fully veiled, except for their eyes, in the photographs. Earlier in the day, the Taliban leader warned God would severely punish Afghans who were ungrateful for Islamic rule in the country, according to a statement. Mr Akhundzada, who is seldom seen in public, said in a statement that Afghans had endured hardships and made sacrifices for almost 50 years so that Islamic law, or Sharia, could be established. Sharia had saved people from 'corruption, oppression, usurpation, drugs, theft, robbery, and plunder'. 'These are great divine blessings that our people should not forget and, during the commemoration of Victory Day (August 15), express great gratitude to Allah Almighty so that the blessings will increase,' said Mr Akhundzada in comments shared on the social platform X. 'If, against God's will, we fail to express gratitude for blessings and are ungrateful for them, we will be subjected to the severe punishment of Allah Almighty,' he said. Cabinet members gave speeches listing the administration's achievements and highlighting diplomatic progress. Those who spoke included foreign minister Amir Khan Muttaqi and interior minister Sirajuddin Haqqani. On Wednesday, at a cabinet meeting in Kandahar, Mr Akhundzada said the stability of the Taliban government lay in the acquisition of religious knowledge. He urged the promotion of religious awareness, the discouragement of immoral conduct, the protection of citizens from harmful ideologies, and the instruction of Afghans in matters of faith and creed, according to a statement shared by government spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat. Mr Akhundzada ordered the Kabul Municipality to build more mosques, and there was a general focus on identifying means to 'further consolidate and fortify' the Islamic government, said Mr Fitrat. This year's anniversary celebrations are more muted than last year's, when the Taliban staged a military parade at a US airbase, drawing anger from President Donald Trump about the abandoned American hardware on display. The country is also gripped by a humanitarian crisis made worse by climate change, millions of Afghans expelled from Iran and Pakistan, and a sharp drop in donor funding.


North Wales Chronicle
11 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Israeli minister confronts long-imprisoned Palestinian leader face to face
Marwan Barghouti is serving five life sentences after being convicted of involvement in attacks at the height of the Palestinian uprising, or intifada, in the early 2000s. Polls consistently show he is the most popular Palestinian leader. He has rarely been seen since his arrest more than two decades ago. It was unclear when the video was taken, but it shows national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, known for staging provocative encounters with Palestinians, telling Barghouti that he will 'not win'. 'Anyone who messes with the people of Israel, anyone who murders our children, anyone who murders our women, we will wipe them out,' Mr Ben-Gvir said in the video. He repeated those words in a post on X in which he shared the footage. Mr Ben-Gvir's spokesman confirmed the visit and the video's authenticity, but denied that the minister was threatening Barghouti. Barghouti, now in his mid-60s, was a senior leader in President Mahmoud Abbas's secular Fatah movement during the intifada. Many Palestinians see him as a natural successor to the ageing and unpopular leader of the Palestinian Authority, which administers parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Israel considers him a terrorist and has shown no sign it would release him. Hamas has demanded his release in exchange for hostages taken in the October 7 2023 attack that triggered the war in the Gaza Strip. In a Facebook post, Barghouti's wife said she could not recognise her husband, who appeared frail in the video. Still, she said after watching the video, he remained connected to the Palestinian people. 'Perhaps a part of me does not want to acknowledge everything that your face and body shows, and what you and the prisoners have been through,' wrote Fadwa Al Barghouthi, who spells their last name differently in English. Israeli officials say they have reduced the conditions under which Palestinians are held to the bare minimum allowed under Israeli and international law. Many detainees released as part of a ceasefire in Gaza earlier this year appeared gaunt and ill, and some were taken for immediate medical treatment.