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3 years ago .Kabul, Afghanistan

Women must have their rights based on Islamic values: Taliban

  • Stanikzai said that women should be provided with their rights based on Afghan culture and Islamic values
  • Stanikzai was critical of the small budget for development in economic sectors
  • The Taliban's decision to ban female students above grade six from going to school has drawn widespread criticism

Written by:Ajay
Published: May 23, 2022 01:59:53 Kabul, Afghanistan

Taliban’s senior leader Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai has come in support of women’s education rights and said that it is the responsibility of the government to provide a safe education to them in the country.

Tolo news reported that Stanikzai, while addressing a gathering to mark the death anniversary of Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour, a former Islamic Emirate leader, said that women should be provided with their rights based on Afghan culture and Islamic values.

Also read: Women’s rights take centre stage in US envoy-Taliban foreign minister meet

“Women can’t even ask for their inheritance. They are deprived of the right to education. Where will women learn Shariah’s lessons? Women make up half of Afghanistan’s population,” he said.

Stanikzai was critical of the small budget for development in economic sectors and also said that due to the economic challenges, people were forced to leave the country.

Also read: Taliban dissolve Afghanistan’s five key agencies, including Human Rights Commission

“We don’t have a chair in the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), we don’t have a chair in the United Nations and we don’t have a political office in Europe,” he said.

Meanwhile, another Taliban leader, Mullah Mohammad Yaqub criticised the economic sanctions on Afghanistan.

Also read: UN chief Antonio Guterres ‘alarmed’ on Taliban’s ‘head-to-toe’ cover rule for women

“They imposed economic sanctions on Afghanistan and made a plot against us in Afghanistan,” he said.

The Taliban’s decision to ban female students above grade six from going to school has drawn widespread criticism at the national and international levels.

Also read: Back to the dark ages? Taliban orders Afghan women to wear all-covering burqa in public

Further, the Taliban regime which took over Kabul in August last year has curtailed women’s rights and freedoms, with women largely excluded from the workforce due to the economic crisis and restrictions.

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