City
Epaper

800 women held in prisons in Afghanistan

By ANI | Updated: January 10, 2024 08:40 IST

Kabul [Afghanistan], January 10 : As the Taliban's atrocities on women in Afghanistan continue in various forms, including suppression ...

Open in App

Kabul [Afghanistan], January 10 : As the Taliban's atrocities on women in Afghanistan continue in various forms, including suppression of their basic rights, a TOLOnews report has highlighted how out of around 19000 people who are currently held under prisons in Afghanistan, at least 800 are women.

According to the deputy head of the Office of the Prison Administration, there are currently about 19,000 inmates serving varying sentences in prisons throughout Afghanistan.

There are no private, unofficial jails in the nation, according to Habibullah Badar, who made this claim in an interview with RTA, the national TV network of the nation.

Additionally, he refuted accusations that inmates were subjected to "torture" in the jail, asserting that there is no torture or other forms of abuse of inmates, according to TOLOnews.

"There are a total of 19,000 detainees in various provinces and districts of the country. Many of them are under investigation. 800 of them are women," said the deputy head of the Prison Administration.

A few military and political experts have called on the Taliban to start providing the captives with educational instruction in the meantime.

"Education is a very important issue for the detainees. The detainees should also be provided with various skills," a political analyst, Zahorullah Zahir said, according to TOLOnews.

Despite the Taliban's initial promise to take a moderate approach towards women's rights after it seized power in August 2021, the ban on higher education is just one of many steps that the armed group has taken to further segregate the country and limit women's role in society.

In the immediate aftermath of August 2021, the Taliban banned girls from going to school beyond the sixth grade and imposed strict rules requiring women to wear hijabs and to travel only with a male chaperone.

They closed down beauty salons and blocked women from working with domestic and international non-governmental aid groups, sparking international outrage on the matter.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Entertainment‘Bigg Boss 19’: Deepak Chahar enters with aim of making sister Malti cook for him

NationalNehru’s writings record of India’s evolving conscience, not just history, says Rahul Gandhi

MumbaiMumbai: Fire Breaks Out Under Byculla Bridge, Hampers Visibility

EntertainmentSonali Bendre condemns SC’s order to remove stray dogs from public places

InternationalAustralia eyes deeper critical minerals partnership with India, keen on Quad Summit in New Delhi: Aussie Envoy

International Realted Stories

International55 from Andhra Pradesh among 370 Indians rescued from Myanmar

InternationalPakistan Factory Blast: 13 Killed, Including Women and Children, in Boiler Explosion in Faisalabad

InternationalUS Navy races to recover crashed fighter jet, helicopter from South China Sea

InternationalFire causes evacuation in pavilion at UN COP30 in Brazil

International5.5 magnitude earthquake hits Bangladesh, tremors felt in W Bengal, adjoining areas