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Afghan girl students dropping out over dress codes

By IANS | Updated: April 29, 2022 15:05 IST

Kabul, April 29 In its latest report, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that due to the imposition ...

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Kabul, April 29 In its latest report, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) said that due to the imposition of new restrictions on the dress of female students and teachers in some provinces of Afghanistan, some students have dropped out of school.

According to the report, the Taliban closed one school in Balkh province for several days after some students had their faces uncovered.

According to an official from the school, the Taliban demanded the sacking of a teacher for her "immodest" dress.

Another school now has a teacher assigned to "prevent vice and promote virtue", the HRW report said.

"The requirements on hijab are getting tougher day by day," a teacher said, adding: "They (Taliban) have spies to record and report... If students or teachers don't follow their strict hijab rules, without any discussion they fire the teachers and expel the students."

Heather Barr, associate women's rights director at the HRW, said: "The Taliban is imposing increasingly strict dress codes on both students and teachers and enforcing these dress codes by expelling students, firing teachers and even closing down the entire school.

"The students have told us they think that this is an effort by the Taliban to convince them to leave school."

Meanwhile, Rina Amiri, the US Special Representative for Human Rights and Women in Afghanistan, criticized the closing of girls' schools in Afghanistan, saying it is taking Afghanistan in a "negative direction", TOLO News reported.

"The situation of women and children is continuing to go in a very negative direction. The longer this continues in this way without robust response from the Taliban, the greater the country is going to suffer more devastating consequences," Amiri said.

But the Ministry of Education said it is ready to open girls' schools above the sixth grade if the leadership calls for it.

In addition to global reactions, the ban on girls' schooling above the sixth grade has been met with widespread reactions from politic, civil society activists and religious scholars.

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

Tags: Ramona AmiriAfghanistanKabulTalibanHuman Rights WatchAfgTalibansUs-based human rights watch`human rights watchHeather barr
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