Current:Home > ScamsUN is seeking to verify that Afghanistan’s Taliban are letting girls study at religious schools -InvestTomorrow
UN is seeking to verify that Afghanistan’s Taliban are letting girls study at religious schools
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:42:53
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations is seeking to verify reports that Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers are allowing girls of all ages to study at Islamic religious schools that are traditionally boys-only, the U.N.’s top official in the country said Wednesday.
U.N. special envoy Roza Otunbayeva told the U.N. Security Council and elaborated to reporters afterward that the United Nations is receiving “more and more anecdotal evidence” that girls can study at the schools, known as madrassas.
“It is not entirely clear, however, what constitutes a madrassa, if there is a standardized curriculum that allows modern education subjects, and how many girls are able to study in madrassas,” she said.
The Taliban have been globally condemned for banning girls and women from secondary school and university, and allowing girls to study only through the sixth grade.
Taliban education authorities “continue to tell us that they are working on creating conditions to allow girls to return to school. But time is passing while a generation of girls is falling behind,” Otunbayeva said.
She said that the Taliban Ministry of Education is reportedly undertaking an assessment of madrassas as well as a review of public school curriculum and warned that the quality of education in Afghanistan “is a growing concern.”
“The international community has rightly focused on the need to reverse the ban on girls’ education,” Otunbayeva said, “but the deteriorating quality of education and access to it is affecting boys as well.”
“A failure to provide a sufficiently modern curriculum with equality of access for both girls and boys will make it impossible to implement the de facto authorities’ own agenda of economic self-sufficiency,” she added.
A Human Rights Watch report earlier this month said the Taliban’s “abusive” educational policies are harming boys as well as girls.
The departure of qualified teachers, including women, regressive curriculum changes and an increase in corporal punishment have led to greater fear of going to school and falling attendance, the report said. Because the Taliban have dismissed all female teachers from boys’ schools, many boys are taught by unqualified people or sit in classrooms with no teachers at all, it said.
Turning to human rights, Otunbayeva said that the key features in Afghanistan “are a record of systemic discrimination against women and girls, repression of political dissent and free speech, a lack of meaningful representation of minorities, and ongoing instances of extrajudicial killing, arbitrary arrests and detentions, torture and ill-treatment.”
The lack of progress in resolving human rights issues is a key factor behind the current impasse between the Taliban and the international community, she said.
Otunbayeva said Afghanistan also faces a growing humanitarian crisis. With Afghans confronting winter weather, more people will depend on humanitarian aid, but with a drop in funding many of the needy will be more vulnerable than they were a year ago, she said.
U.N. humanitarian coordinator Ramesh Rajasingham said that “humanitarian needs continue to push record levels, with more than 29 million people requiring humanitarian assistance — one million more than in January, and a 340% increase in the last five years.”
Between January and October, he said, the U.N. and its partners provided assistance to 26.5 million people, including 14.2 million women and girls. But as the year ends, the U.N. appeal is still seeking to close a $1.8 billion funding gap.
Rajasingham said the humanitarian crisis has been exacerbated by three earthquakes in eight days in October in the western province of Herat that affected 275,000 people and damaged 40,000 homes.
A further problem is the return of more than 450,000 Afghans after Pakistan on Nov. 1 ordered “illegal foreigners” without documentation to leave, he said. More than 85% of the returnees are women and children, he said, and many have been stripped of their belongings, arrive in poor medical condition and require immediate assistance at the border as well and longer-term support.
veryGood! (53)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Below Deck’s Kate Chastain Response to Ben Robinson’s Engagement Will Put Some Wind in Your Sails
- Texas inmate Trent Thompson climbs over fence to escape jail, captured about 250 miles away
- Taliban begins to enforce education ban, leaving Afghan women with tears and anger
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- In Pennsylvania, One Senate Seat With Big Climate Implications
- Judge Fails to Block Dakota Pipeline Construction After Burial Sites Destroyed
- Lily-Rose Depp Confirms Months-Long Romance With Crush 070 Shake
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: Get This $280 Crossbody Bag for Just $59
Ranking
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis Share Update on Freaky Friday Sequel
- Perceiving without seeing: How light resets your internal clock
- UN watchdog says landmines are placed around Ukrainian nuke plant occupied by Russia
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Reena Evers-Everette pays tribute to her mother, Myrlie Evers, in deeply personal letter
- Fewer abortions, more vasectomies: Why the procedure may be getting more popular
- Video shows 10-foot crocodile pulled from homeowner's pool in Florida
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Rihanna's Latest Pregnancy Photos Proves She's a Total Savage
Confusion and falsehoods spread as China reverses its 'zero-COVID' policy
Rihanna's Latest Pregnancy Photos Proves She's a Total Savage
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
CRISPR gene-editing may boost cancer immunotherapy, new study finds
American life expectancy is now at its lowest in nearly two decades
Rihanna's Latest Pregnancy Photos Proves She's a Total Savage