- Salah driven not distracted by contract deadlock, says Slot
- Algeria holds writer Boualem Sansal on national security charges: lawyer
- Biden proposes huge expansion of weight loss drug access
- Saudi 2025 budget sees lower deficit on spending trims
- Pogba's brother, five others, on trial for blackmailing him
- Israel pounds Beirut as security cabinet discusses ceasefire plan
- Prosecutors seek up to 15-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- Emery bids to reverse Villa slump against Juventus
- Survivors, bodies recovered from capsized Red Sea tourist boat
- Carrefour attempts damage control against Brazil 'boycott'
- Namibians heads to the polls wanting change
- Sales of new US homes lowest in around two years: govt
- Paris mayor Hidalgo says to bow out in 2026
- Stocks, dollar mixed on Trump tariff warning
- ICC to decide fate of Pakistan's Champions Trophy on Friday
- Man Utd revenue falls as Champions League absence bites
- Russia vows reply after Ukraine strikes again with US missiles
- Trump threatens trade war on Mexico, Canada, China
- Motta's injury-hit Juve struggling to fire ahead of Villa trip
- Cycling chiefs seek WADA ruling on carbon monoxide use
- Israel pounds Beirut as security cabinet to discuss ceasefire
- Fewest new HIV cases since late 1980s: UNAIDS report
- 4 security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood Pakistan capital
- Four bodies, four survivors recovered from Egypt Red Sea sinking: governor
- Ayub century helps Pakistan crush Zimbabwe, level series
- French court cracks down on Corsican language use in local assembly
- Prosecutors seek up to 14-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- Russia expels UK diplomat accused of espionage
- Israeli security cabinet to discuss ceasefire as US says deal 'close'
- COP29 president blames rich countries for 'imperfect' deal
- Stocks retreat, dollar mixed on Trump tariff warning
- No regrets: Merkel looks back at refugee crisis, Russia ties
- IPL history-maker, 13, who 'came on Earth to play cricket'
- Ukraine says Russia using landmines to carry out 'genocidal activities'
- Prosecutors seek up to 12-year terms for French rape trial defendants
- 'Record' drone barrage pummels Ukraine as missile tensions seethe
- Laos hostel staff detained after backpackers' deaths
- Hong Kong LGBTQ advocate wins posthumous legal victory
- Ukraine says cannot meet landmine destruction pledge due to Russia invasion
- Rod Stewart to play Glastonbury legends slot
- Winter rains pile misery on war-torn Gaza's displaced
- 'Taiwan also has baseball': jubilant fans celebrate historic win
- Russia pummels Ukraine with 'record' drone barrage
- Paul Pogba blackmail trial set to open in Paris
- China's Huawei unveils 'milestone' smartphone with homegrown OS
- Landmine victims gather to protest US decision to supply Ukraine
- Indian rival royal factions clash outside palace
- Equity markets retreat, dollar gains as Trump fires tariff warning
- Manga adaptation 'Drops of God' nets International Emmy Award
- China's Huawei launches 'milestone' smartphone with homegrown OS
CMSC | -0.65% | 24.57 | $ | |
RBGPF | 1.33% | 61 | $ | |
BTI | 0.57% | 37.545 | $ | |
RELX | 0.29% | 46.705 | $ | |
RIO | -1.87% | 61.825 | $ | |
SCS | -1.29% | 13.545 | $ | |
AZN | -0.28% | 66.215 | $ | |
GSK | -0.68% | 33.919 | $ | |
NGG | -0.87% | 62.715 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.44% | 6.8 | $ | |
BCE | -1.94% | 26.505 | $ | |
VOD | -0.58% | 8.859 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.51% | 24.455 | $ | |
BCC | -3.34% | 147.57 | $ | |
JRI | -0.3% | 13.33 | $ | |
BP | -1.77% | 28.81 | $ |
Heartbreak as Afghan girls ordered home just hours after schools reopen
The Taliban ordered girls' secondary schools in Afghanistan to shut Wednesday just hours after they reopened, an official confirmed, sparking confusion and heartbreak over the policy reversal by the hardline Islamist group.
"Yes, it's true," Taliban spokesman Inamullah Samangani told AFP when asked to confirm reports that girls had been ordered home.
He would not immediately explain the reasoning, while education ministry spokesman Aziz Ahmad Rayan said: "We are not allowed to comment on this".
An AFP team was filming at Zarghona High School in the capital, Kabul, when a teacher entered and said class was over.
Crestfallen students, back at school for the first time since the Taliban seized power in August last year, tearfully packed up their belongings and filed out.
"I see my students crying and reluctant to leave classes," said Palwasha, a teacher at Omra Khan girls' school in Kabul.
"It is very painful to see your students crying."
United Nations envoy Deborah Lyons called reports of the closure "disturbing".
"If true, what could possibly be the reason?" she tweeted.
When the Taliban took over last August, schools were closed because of the Covid-19 pandemic, but only boys and younger girls were allowed to resume classes two months later.
There were fears the Taliban would shut down all formal education for girls, as they did during their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001.
The international community has made the right to education for all a sticking point in negotiations over aid and recognition of the new Taliban regime, with several nations and organisations offering to pay teachers.
On Wednesday, the order for girls' secondary schools to resume appeared to only be patchily observed, with reports emerging from some parts of the country -- including the Taliban's spiritual heartland of Kandahar -- that classes would restart next month instead.
But several did reopen in the capital and elsewhere, including Herat and Panjshir -- temporarily at least.
"All the students that we are seeing today are very happy, and they are here with open eyes," Latifa Hamdard, principal of Gawharshad Begum High School in Herat, told AFP.
- Barriers -
The education ministry said reopening the schools was always a government objective and the Taliban were not bowing to international pressure.
"We are doing it as part of our responsibility to provide education and other facilities to our students," ministry spokesman Rayan told AFP Tuesday.
The Taliban had insisted they wanted to ensure schools for girls aged 12 to 19 were segregated and would operate according to Islamic principles.
The Taliban have imposed a slew of restrictions on women, effectively banning them from many government jobs, policing what they wear and preventing them from travelling outside of their cities alone.
They have also detained several women's rights activists.
Even if schools do reopen fully, barriers to girls returning to education remain, with many families suspicious of the Taliban and reluctant to allow their daughters outside.
Others see little point in girls learning at all.
"Those girls who have finished their education have ended up sitting at home and their future is uncertain," said Heela Haya, 20, from Kandahar, who has decided to quit school.
"What will be our future?"
It is common for Afghan pupils to miss chunks of the school year as a result of poverty or conflict, and some continue lessons well into their late teens or early twenties.
Human Rights Watch also raised the issue of the few avenues girls are given to apply their education.
The education ministry acknowledged authorities faced a shortage of teachers -- with many among the tens of thousands of people who fled the country as the Taliban swept to power.
"We need thousands of teachers and to solve this problem we are trying to hire new teachers on a temporary basis," the spokesman said.
K.Thomson--BTB