Taliban have issued nearly 100 decrees restricting women: Ex-Afghan official

Asila Wardak, former director general of UN affairs in the Afghan Foreign Ministry, speaks at a high-level event on global solidarity with Afghan women and girls. (Photo: X)
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Updated 20 September 2023
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Taliban have issued nearly 100 decrees restricting women: Ex-Afghan official

  • The way the Taliban are representing Islam is ‘very dangerous,’ says Asila Wardak
  • UAE minister: ‘We must continue to advocate for the rights of women and girls’

LONDON: The Taliban government in Afghanistan has issued more than 94 edicts and decrees restricting the daily lives of women, and this is affecting their mental health, a former Afghan official said at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday.

Speaking at a high-level event on global solidarity with Afghan women and girls, Asila Wardak, former director general of UN affairs in the Afghan Foreign Ministry, said the restrictions banned Afghan women and girls from education, going to the park, moving around freely, accessing health services and traveling.

These limitations are affecting their mental health, and are not inspired by Islam or Afghan culture, she added.

“The way that they (the Taliban) are representing Islam, it’s very dangerous for the region and then for the Islamic community also, because I’m sure there are lots of extremist people in different Islamic countries, and then they’ll copy what the Taliban is doing in Afghanistan,” she said.

“It’s adding to extremism in the world. It’s also a big threat to global security. It’s not only about Afghanistan.”

Habiba Sarabi, former Afghan minister for women’s affairs, echoed Wardak’s views and called upon Muslim-majority countries to show the world that the Taliban’s oppressive policies toward women and girls do not reflect the true values of Islam.

“The Taliban want to push us back hundreds of years in the name of Islam. Please show the world that what they’re doing doesn’t reflect the true values of Islam,” said Sarabi.

“It’s upon us to continue to exert public and private pressure from all possible sides to prevent the normalization of the Taliban gender apartheid, and to give Afghan women a seat at all levels, tables and international diplomatic fora where Afghanistan is being discussed.”

UAE Minister of State Ahmed bin Ali Al-Sayegh also highlighted that Taliban-imposed restrictions on women “have no basis in Islam or in culture,” adding: “I hope we continue to voice our condemnations, but also to take concrete steps on the ground to help the Afghan population.”

He said the UAE had offered Afghan girls educational scholarships, but they were stopped from taking advantage of those opportunities by the Taliban.

“We must also continue to advocate politically, and through diplomacy, for the rights of women and girls,” he added.


Ukraine may form joint ventures with allies to boost defenses against ballistic missiles

Updated 8 sec ago
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Ukraine may form joint ventures with allies to boost defenses against ballistic missiles

  • Patriot systems have been an important part of Ukraine’s efforts to defend its skies
  • Stocks of the ⁠Patriot system’s PAC-3 ⁠missiles have been running “critically” low, Fedorov said

KYIV: Ukraine is considering forming consortia with its allies to build air defenses capable of downing ballistic missiles and overcome a critical deficit of munitions for US-made Patriot systems, its defense minister said.
Patriot systems have been an important part of Ukraine’s efforts to defend its skies against Russian ballistic missiles, which fly faster than the speed of sound and cannot be intercepted by Ukraine’s other air defense systems.
Stocks of the ⁠Patriot system’s PAC-3 ⁠missiles have been running “critically” low, Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov said.
“Ukraine has significant potential to independently produce counter-ballistic systems and missiles,” Fedorov told reporters this week, adding that air defenses had been his main focus since he took office in mid-January. President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly criticized delays by Ukraine’s allies in providing ⁠Patriot missiles and other air defenses since Russia’s 2022 invasion, and said that at one point in January several systems had run out of ammunition.
Fedorov said he had discussed the idea of creating joint air defense ventures with Zelensky. Reuters could not determine whether discussions have already taken place with allies or which of its allies Kyiv has in mind.
“This requires a dedicated project — the mathematics is complex and requires time. But Ukraine must develop its own capabilities,” Fedorov said.
STARLINK CUT-OFF
Fedorov ⁠touted an ⁠early success in his tenure last month after Elon Musk’s SpaceX agreed to cut off Russian forces from thousands of its Starlink satellite Internet terminals which were not on a Kyiv-approved whitelist.
He said that since the cut-off, the number of Russian livestream connections on the battlefield had dropped elevenfold.
“We effectively cut Russia off from this connectivity,” he said.
The terminals are resistant to electronic jamming and thus an invaluable means to communicate on the battlefield and to pilot drones.
Fedorov said intercepts of radio frequencies, which can be disrupted more easily, had increased significantly after the cut-off.