Taliban stops issuing driving licences to women in Afghanistan: Report | World News

0
81

Taliban regime has already shut schools for girls for secondary classes, evoking strong reactions from the United Nations. It has also ordered that women looking to travel must not be allowed transport unless they are accompanied by a close male relative

The Taliban regime in Afghanistan has now stopped issuing driving licences to women and other provinces of the land-locked country, news agency ANI quoted Afghan media reports.

Before the Taliban took over Afghanistan, women could be seen driving in some of the major cities including Kabul. But now the regime has imposed this restriction.

The human rights situation in Afghanistan has worsened since the Taliban’s return to power last year. From banning girls from schools above sixth grade to not allowing women to take trips alone, there have been reports of women rights being snatched away by the new government.

Here’s a look at some of the restrictions Taliban has imposed on women since capturing Afghanistan.

> On March 23, the Taliban regime shut schools for girls for secondary classes across the country, just hours after they had reopened for the first time since the new regime took over. In 2021, just a month after takeover, the Taliban had allowed some schools for girls up to class 6 to reopen. The move evoked stern response from the United Nations. The UN Security Council had said, “Security Council members reaffirmed the right to education for all Afghans, including girls, and called on the Taliban to respect the right to education and adhere to their commitments to reopen schools for all female students without further delay.” The Taliban’s Ministry of Education (MoE) said the Islamic Emirate is close to a solution for reopening the school for girls.

> Barely a month after it took over, the Taliban administration barred women from effectively working in government offices, banks, media companies and other work places. Waheedullah Hashimi, a senior figure in the Taliban, said the regime will fully implement sharia law, while adding that women should not work alongside men.

> In December last year, the Taliban ruled that women seeking to travel anything other than short distances must not be offered transport unless escorted by close male relative. Also, the regime called on vehicle owners to offer rides only to women wearing hijabs.



Close Story

Less time to read?

Try Quickreads


  • A worker in a protective suit carries disinfection equipment as he walks near an area under lockdown amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Beijing.

    Beijing returns to work from home as subway stations shut amid Covid surge

    Millions of people in Beijing returned to work Thursday, many remotely, with scores of subway stations shut after a national holiday muted by the coronavirus curbs. Beijing reported 50 local virus cases on Thursday, a day after it said people in its most populous district Chaoyang should work from home. Those in the area, home to around 3.5 million, who need to visit their offices were encouraged to drive themselves and avoid gatherings.

  • Russia's President Vladimir Putin

    Russia practises nuclear-capable missile strikes, says defence ministry

    Russia on Wednesday said its forces had practised simulated nuclear-capable missile strikes in the western enclave of Kaliningrad, amid Moscow’s military campaign in Ukraine. During Wednesday’s war games in the enclave on the Baltic Sea located between EU members Poland and Lithuania, Russia practised simulated “electronic launches” of nuclear-capable Iskander mobile ballistic missile systems, the defence ministry said in a statement. The combat units also practised “actions in conditions of radiation and chemical contamination”.

  • Imran Khan, in a recent interview, said Bushra Bibi is far ahead of him on the path of spirituality. 

    Imran Khan talks about sons, Bushra Bibi; says, ‘Worst thing of divorce is…’

    Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan in an exclusive interview with HUM News on Wednesday said he has not seen his sons Suleiman Isa Khan and Qasim Khan in 2.5 years because of the pandemic. On being asked what Eidi Imran Khan sent to his children, Imran Khan said, “The worst thing of a divorce is when you get separated from your children”. His enemies are now preparing material for full-blown character assassination.

  • A view shows a residential building destroyed during Ukraine-Russia conflict in the southern port city of Mariupol.

    Russia pounds Ukraine, targets Western weapon supply routes

    Complaining that the West is “stuffing Ukraine with weapons,” Russia pounded railroad stations and other supply-line points across the country on Wednesday. Heavy fighting also raged at the Azovstal steel mill in Mariupol that represented the last pocket of Ukrainian resistance in the ruined southern port city, according to the mayor. But a Russian official denied Moscow’s troops were storming the plant, as Ukrainian commanders claimed a day earlier.

  • Twitter courts advertisers amid uncertain future under Musk

    Twitter courts advertisers amid uncertain future under Musk

    Twitter Inc is facing a skeptical audience as it showcases its advertising opportunities on Wednesday evening at an event in New York City, three ad agency executives told Reuters, as the social media company’s plans under billionaire Elon Musk remain unclear. The Tesla chief executive, who is buying Twitter for $44 billion, has tweeted that the platform should not have ads so it can have more control over its content moderation policies.

कोई जवाब दें

कृपया अपनी टिप्पणी दर्ज करें!
कृपया अपना नाम यहाँ दर्ज करें