"Targeted discrimination" UN slams Taliban's decision to suspend women from universities
Dec 21, 2022
Kabul [Afghanistan], December 21 : The UN family and the entire humanitarian community in Afghanistan on Wednesday shared the outrage of millions of Afghans and the international community over the decision by the Taliban to close universities to female students across the country until further notice and called on the de facto authorities to immediately revoke the decision.
In a statement, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said the UN and its humanitarian partners also urge the de facto authorities to reopen girls' schools beyond the sixth grade and end all measures preventing women and girls from participating fully in daily public life," UNAMA said in a statement.
"Banning women from attending university is a continuation of the systematic policies of targeted discrimination put in place by the Taliban against women," the UNAMA statement read.
Since 15 August 2021, the de facto authorities have barred girls from attending secondary school, restricted women and girls' freedom of movement, excluded women from most areas of the workforce and banned women from using parks, gyms and public bath houses. These restrictions culminate with the confinement of Afghan women and girls to the four walls of their homes.
The UN mission argued that preventing half of the population from contributing meaningfully to society and the economy will prove devastating for the whole country. "It will expose Afghanistan to further international isolation, economic hardship and suffering, impacting millions for years to come," the statement said.
The UN estimates that restricting women from working can result in an economic loss of up to USD 1 billion - or up to five percent of the country's GDP. The ban of women from universities, including female teachers and professors, will contribute to additional economic losses.
The UN mission said excluding women and girls from secondary and tertiary education not only denies them this right, it denies Afghan society as a whole the benefit of the contributions that women and girls have to offer. "It denies all of Afghanistan a future."
"The steps taken by the de facto authorities to exclude women and girls from education, the workplace and other areas of life increase risks of forced and underage marriage, violence and abuse," the statement added.
Continued discrimination against more than half the population of the country will stand in the way of Afghanistan achieving an inclusive society where everyone can live in dignity and enjoy equal opportunities.
The UN in Afghanistan and its humanitarian partners reminded the Taliban that taking away the free will of women to choose their own fate, disempowering and excluding them systematically from all aspects of their public and political life is regressive and stands against universal human rights standards upon which peaceful and stable societies are based on.