logo

Daily Updated Afghan News Service

  • Home
  • About
  • Opinion
  • Links to More News
  • Good Afghan News
  • Poll Results
  • Learn about Islam
  • Learn Dari (Afghan Persian/Farsi)

Recent Posts

  • Flood death toll in Afghanistan rises to 51 April 2, 2026
  • Kandahari Hat: From Style Choice to Forced Attire in Kabul April 2, 2026
  • UN review finds Taliban policies violate women’s rights convention April 2, 2026
  • Bennett Reports 471 Civilian Casualties from Unexploded Ordnance in Afghanistan Last Year April 2, 2026
  • Senior Officials Sent To China For Talks With Taliban, Says Pakistan April 2, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 2, 2026 April 2, 2026
  • 19 Afghan migrants killed as boat capsizes off Turkish coast April 2, 2026
  • Afghanistan falls 5–1 to Syria in Asian Cup qualifier April 2, 2026
  • Floods, rainfall kill 48 in Afghanistan over past week, ANDMA says April 1, 2026
  • US eases asylum freeze for vetted migrants, keeps Afghanistan ban April 1, 2026

Categories

  • Afghan Children
  • Afghan Sports News
  • Afghan Women
  • Afghanistan Freedom Front
  • Al-Qaeda
  • Anti-Government Militants
  • Anti-Taliban Resistance
  • AOP Reports
  • Arab-Afghan Relations
  • Art and Culture
  • Australia-Afghanistan Relations
  • Book Review
  • Britain-Afghanistan Relations
  • Canada-Afghanistan Relations
  • Censorship
  • Central Asia
  • China-Afghanistan Relations
  • Civilian Injuries and Deaths
  • Corruption
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Drone warfare
  • Drugs
  • Economic News
  • Education
  • Elections News
  • Entertainment News
  • Environmental News
  • Ethnic Issues
  • EU-Afghanistan Relations
  • Everyday Life
  • France-Afghanistan Relations
  • Germany-Afghanistan Relations
  • Haqqani Network
  • Health News
  • Heroism
  • History
  • Human Rights
  • India-Afghanistan Relations
  • Interviews
  • Iran-Afghanistan Relations
  • ISIS/DAESH
  • Islamophobia News
  • Japan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Landmines
  • Media
  • Misc.
  • Muslims and Islam
  • NATO-Afghanistan
  • News in Dari (Persian/Farsi)
  • NRF – National Resistance Front
  • Opinion/Editorial
  • Other News
  • Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Peace Talks
  • Photos
  • Political News
  • Reconstruction and Development
  • Refugees and Migrants
  • Russia-Afghanistan Relations
  • Science and Technology
  • Security
  • Society
  • Tajikistan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Taliban
  • Traffic accidents
  • Travel
  • Turkey-Afghanistan Relations
  • UN-Afghanistan Relations
  • Uncategorized
  • US-Afghanistan Relations
  • Uzbekistan-Afghanistan Relations

Archives

Dari/Pashto Services

  • Bakhtar News Agency
  • BBC Pashto
  • BBC Persian
  • DW Dari
  • DW Pashto
  • VOA Dari
  • VOA Pashto

Inside Kabul’s Secret School For Girls

22nd December, 2021 · admin

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
Abubakar Siddique
December 22, 2021

Dozens of Afghan girls speak in hushed voices as they cram inside a house in the Afghan capital, Kabul.

For months, the house has served as a secret school, with around 50 girls attending science, math, and literature classes.

They are among the millions of girls who have been denied an education since the Taliban forcibly seized control of Afghanistan in August.

Since its takeover, the militant Islamist group has only allowed girls in grades one through six to attend school. But girls’ secondary school education has been restricted to only a handful of the country’s 34 provinces.

Mursal, a university graduate, has risked her life by running the secret school. The sole teacher at the school, she believes educating the dozens of girls in her neighborhood is a risk worth taking. Her students, too, face severe punishment by the Taliban if they are caught.

“The aim of establishing this school is to help girls catch up on their studies after their education was stopped after [the Taliban] grabbed power,” Mursal, who requested that her real name not be used out of concern for her safety, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi.

Mursal, who is in her 20s, runs the school at her own expense, providing school supplies for her students.

Suraya, one of Mursal’s students, says the return of Taliban rule feels like being sentenced to a life in prison.

“Many girls were hopeless and suffering from depression and stress,” Suraya says. “This school has helped us a lot.”

“My request to the Taliban is to reopen schools so that girls don’t remain illiterate and without a future,” says Gul Meena, an 11th-grader who attends the underground school.

“Seeking an education is compulsory for all Muslims, men and women alike,” she adds, referring to Islamic principles under which education is considered a religious duty for both males and females.

‘Don’t Want Girls To Go To School’

The Taliban claims that its ban on girls’ secondary school education is temporary while the new regime ensures a “safe environment” for all girls to go to school.

Critics point out that the militants made similar pledges during their first stint in power from 1996-2001. Yet they banned girls’ education during their entire six-year rule.

Millions of girls, particularly in urban areas, flocked back to school following the U.S.-led invasion in 2001 that toppled the Taliban regime.

Nazar Mohammad Irfan, a spokesman for the Taliban’s Education Ministry, told Radio Azadi that the hard-line group was not opposed to private or informal schools for girls.

“We are committed to working with them as much as possible so we can raise the literacy and education levels across the country and overcome our shortcomings,” Irfan said.

But many are not convinced.

“I think it is very clear that all of the reasons that they are coming up with are just ways to try to cover up the fact that, essentially, they don’t want girls to go to school,” Heather Barr, the associate director of the women’s rights division at Human Rights Watch, told RFE/RL.

She says the real aim of the Taliban’s delay seems to be gender segregation — something the Taliban has gone to great lengths to enforce in universities and government offices.

“Government secondary schools were already segregated by gender, so it is very difficult to see what they want to do,” she adds.

Barr says some schools have reopened in eight of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. In many cases, the schools have reopened after negotiations between local teachers and local Taliban officials.

Private schools, often run by nongovernmental organizations, are allowed to operate in theory. But many of them have shut down amid the country’s devastating economic and humanitarian crisis.

“The policies that the Taliban has already put in place that are so harmful to women and girls could actually become even worse and more rigid and more violently enforced,” Barr warns.

All-Male Government

Since regaining power, the Taliban has reimposed some of the same repressive laws and retrograde policies that defined its former brutal rule, when it banned girls from attending school and women from working outside their homes.

In September, the Taliban formed an all-male government that was made up exclusively of senior militants. The militants also abolished the Women’s Affairs Ministry and reestablished the feared Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice.

The Taliban has advised women to largely remain indoors for their own safety. The militants have also ordered tens of thousands of former female government workers not to return to work, even as their male colleagues went back.

Neda, one of Mursal’s students at the secret school, says the future of girls and women under the Taliban weighs heavily on her mind.

“What will our future look like?” she asks.

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Afghan Children, Afghan Women, Education, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – December 22, 2021

22nd December, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

A Child Killed in Faryab Province

22nd December, 2021 · admin

8am: A child has been mysteriously killed in the Qaisar district of Faryab province, local sources say. The cause of child murder is not clear yet, local Taliban authorities stressed. Meanwhile, three children were abducted in Herat province yesterday and the level of criminal offenses in the country has increased. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • A Man Stabbed to Death Mysteriously in Kunduz
Posted in Security, Taliban | Tags: Faryab, Taliban Security Failure |

People Are More Interested in Getting Covid-19 Vaccine: Officials in Parwan

22nd December, 2021 · admin

8am: The health official claims that the implementation of the corona vaccine in Parwan province with the exception of Kabul has been higher than in other provinces, saying that about 15 percent of people over the age of 18 had been vaccinated in different parts of the province. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Afghanistan, Parwan, Vaccination |

UN Security Council Approves Resolution Facilitating Some Aid To Afghanistan

22nd December, 2021 · admin

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
December 22, 2021

The UN Security Council has adopted a resolution to facilitate the flow of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan as the war-torn country teeters on the brink of a humanitarian crisis after Taliban militants seized power in August.

The resolution, approved unanimously on December 22, says the “payment of funds, other financial assets or economic resources, and the provision of goods and services necessary to ensure the timely delivery of such assistance or to support such activities are permitted.”

The U.K. mission to the UN said in a tweet that the “resolution will help save lives by ensuring that 1988 sanctions regime poses no obstacle to provision of humanitarian assistance.”

“This directly responds to what the humanitarian community told us they need,” it added.

Since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, the international community has refused to recognize the militia as the new rulers. It has urged the militants to establish an inclusive government and to ensure the fundamental human rights of all Afghans.

Key global donors have blocked most of their aid to the country and reserves of the Afghan central bank held abroad were also frozen.

The UN resolution says that the freeing up of humanitarian assistance supports “basic human needs in Afghanistan” and is “not a violation” of sanctions imposed on entities linked to the Taliban.

A World Food Program (WFP) survey last week showed that an estimated 98 percent of Afghans are not eating enough, with 7-in-10 families resorting to borrowing food, which pushes them deeper into poverty.

Prices for food, fuel, and other basics have been rising, putting them out of reach for many people, and pressure on the Afghan currency has made the impact worse.

Earlier this month, the World Bank said donors had approved the transfer of $280 million from a frozen trust fund to two aid agencies to help Afghanistan respond to its humanitarian crisis.

During the 1996-2001 Taliban rule of Afghanistan, the militants banned women and girls from education and public life, mandated beards for men and attendance at prayers, banned sports and entertainment, and carried out public executions.

With reporting by AFP

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • UN Offers About $6M to Taliban for Security: Reuters
  • Abdullah calls on OIC to mobilize more funds to help Afghans
Posted in Economic News, Taliban, UN-Afghanistan Relations |

The Albanian tourist town that welcomed Afghan refugees

21st December, 2021 · admin

Al Jazeera: Amid the kitsch hotels and eerie off-season silence, a new community is adjusting to life outside their homeland. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Refugees and Migrants | Tags: Albania, Escape from the Taliban |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – December 21, 2021

21st December, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Afghanistan Hosts Regional Muay Thai Contest

21st December, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: Afghanistan will host a three-nation Muay Thai competition between athletes from Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan, officials said.  The Muay Thai competition will be held in the southwestern province of Nimroz on Thursday, officials said, adding that more than 100 athletes will participate. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Sports News 

  • Athletes Call on Afghan Olympic Committee for Help
Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Martial Arts, Muay Thai, Nimroz |

No pay for staff. No patient supplies. No heat. This is health care in Afghanistan

21st December, 2021 · admin

NPR: Spiegel and other observers say sanctions imposed by the U.N. are the reason. Many countries that previously contributed huge sums to Afghanistan have stopped donating. The idea behind the sanctions is to encourage the Taliban, which took over in August, to abandon the kinds of human rights abuses that marked their previous turn in power. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Health News |

A Three-Day Polio Vaccination Campaign Starts in Nimruz province

21st December, 2021 · admin

8am: A three-day polio vaccine campaign has been launched in Nimruz province, local sources say. “The implementation of the polio vaccine has been very effective in preventing the spread of polio,” said Mullah Abdul Rahman Abdullah, head of the Nimruz Public Health Department to Hasht-e Subh. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Nimroz, Polio, Vaccination |
Previous Posts
Next Posts

Subscribe to the Afghanistan Online YouTube Channel

---

---

---

Get Yours!

Peace be with you

Afghan Dresses

© Afghan Online Press
  • About
  • Links To More News
  • Opinion
  • Poll