Taliban letter tells NGOs in Afghanistan to stop employing women or face closure

31 December 2024, 08:24

Taliban fighters stand guard in Kabul, Afghanistan
Afghanistan Taliban. Picture: PA

It is the Taliban’s latest attempt to control or intervene in NGO activity.

The Taliban have said they will close all national and foreign non-governmental groups (NGOs) in Afghanistan employing women.

It comes two years after they told NGOs to suspend the employment of Afghan women, allegedly because they did not wear the Islamic headscarf correctly.

In a letter published on social media platform X on Sunday night, the Economy Ministry warned that failure to comply with the latest order would lead to NGOs losing their licence to operate in Afghanistan.

The United Nations said the space for women in Afghanistan has shrunk dramatically in the last two years and reiterated its call for the Taliban to reverse the restrictions.

“This really impacts how we can provide life saving humanitarian assistance to all the people in Afghanistan,” UN associate spokesperson Florencia Soto Nino-Martinez said.

“And obviously we are very concerned by the fact that we are talking about a country where half the population’s rights are being denied and are living in poverty, and many of them, not just women, are facing a humanitarian crisis.”

The ministry said it was responsible for the registration, co-ordination, leadership and supervision of all activities carried out by national and foreign organisations.

The government was once again ordering the stoppage of all female work in institutions not controlled by the Taliban, according to the letter.

It is the Taliban’s latest attempt to control or intervene in NGO activity.

Earlier this month, the UN Security Council heard that an increasing proportion of female Afghan humanitarian workers were prevented from doing their work even though relief work remains essential.

According to Tom Fletcher, a senior UN official, the proportion of humanitarian organisations reporting that their female or male staff were stopped by the Taliban’s morality police has also increased.

The Taliban deny they are stopping aid agencies from carrying out their work or interfering with their activities.

They have already barred women from many jobs and most public spaces, and also excluded them from education beyond sixth grade.

In another development, Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada has ordered that buildings should not have windows looking into places where a woman might sit or stand.

According to a four-clause decree posted on X late Saturday, the order applies to new buildings as well as existing ones.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

New York Police Department chief of patrol Philip Rivera, centre, during a press conference in New York

10 people wounded in shooting outside New York City nightclub

The sun sets over a tent camp for displaced Palestinians in the central Gaza Strip town of Khan Younis

Israeli air strikes kill at least 18 in Gaza

Agnes Keleti

Oldest living Olympic medal winner Agnes Keleti dies aged 103

Police investigators work at the site of the shooting in Cetinje

Gunman who killed at least 12 people in Montenegro shooting kills himself

A man reacts in grief as the body of a child is brought to hospital following an air strike

Three children among 10 killed by Israeli air strike in Gaza Strip

New Orleans Car Into Crowd

Biden: Islamic State-inspired driver expressed desire to kill

Trump Hotel-Fire-Las Vegas

Firework mortars and gas cannisters inside Tesla that exploded in Las Vegas

South Korea Martial Law

Impeached South Korean president issues defiant message

New Orleans Car Into Crowd

US army veteran kills 15 in New Year’s Eve ‘terror attack’

Emergency service vehicles form a security barrier to keep other vehicles out of the French Quarter after a vehicle drove into a crowd on New Orleans’ Canal and Bourbon Street

What we know about vehicle attack in New Orleans that killed at least 15

Police block the area after a vehicle caught fire and exploded outside the lobby of President-elect Donald Trump’s hotel in Las Vegas

One person dies when Cybertruck catches fire and explodes outside Trump hotel

Montenegro Shooting

Montenegro police search for gunman after shooting rampage

Emergency services at the scene after a vehicle drove into a crowd in New Orleans

Driver ‘hell-bent on carnage’ kills 10 and injures 33 in New Orleans

Then-Estonian President Arnold Ruutel listens to a speech during the Vilnius Conference 2006 in Lithuania

Former Estonian president Arnold Ruutel dies aged 96

Five people were killed by the fireworks in Berlin

Five killed in New Year chaos in Germany, as dozens of police officers injured and hundreds of suspects arrested

Mourners wait to pay tribute to the plane crash victims at a memorial altar at Muan International Airport in South Korea

Families of South Korean plane crash victims visit site for memorial service