City
Epaper

US, allies call on Taliban to revoke ban on girls' education in Afghanistan

By ANI | Updated: March 25, 2022 07:20 IST

Condemning the Taliban's decision not to reopen secondary schools to Afghan girls, the United States and its allies have called on the group to revoke its decision.

Open in App

Condemning the Taliban's decision not to reopen secondary schools to Afghan girls, the United States and its allies have called on the group to revoke its decision.

A joint statement issued by Foreign Ministers of Canada, France, Italy, Norway, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and the High Representative of the European Union has condemned the Taliban's decision on March 23 to deny so many Afghan girls the opportunity to finally go back to school.

"The Taliban's action contradicted its public assurances to the Afghan people and to the international community," read the statement, adding that the decision came after months of work by the international community to support teacher stipends based on an expectation that schools would be open for all, with the higher interest of Afghan students and teachers in mind.

"We call on the Taliban urgently to reverse this decision, which will have consequences far beyond its harm to Afghan girls. Unreversed, it will profoundly harm Afghanistan's prospects for social cohesion and economic growth, its ambition to become a respected member in the community of nations, and the willingness of Afghans to return from overseas," added the statement.

The statement further said that the move will have an inevitable impact on the Taliban's prospects of gaining political support and legitimacy either at home or abroad. "Every Afghan citizen, boy or girl, man or woman, has an equal right to an education at all levels, in all provinces of the country," it added.

Notably, as the new school year begins in Afghanistan, the Taliban has announced that the boys can continue their education normally, however, the doors of the schools will be closed to girls beyond the sixth grade, reported local media.

"The Ministry of Education once again assures our nation that it is fully committed to providing the educational rights of all our compatriots. In order to generalize and standardize the quality of education ...," Tolo News quoted Aziz Ahmad Rayan, director of publications and communications at the Taliban Ministry of Education.

Rayan added that the schools for the girls beyond grade six will remain closed for now and the final decision on the same will be made by Taliban leadership.

( With inputs from ANI )

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: Aziz ahmad rayanEuropean UnionTalibanTalibansState steelEuropean affairsTaliban movementProminent talibanNe regionPashtun taliban
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIndia-EU FTA: India and European Union Sign Historic ‘Grand Deal’; PM Narendra Modi Calls It ‘Mother of All Agreements’

InternationalGreenland PM Jens-Frederik Nielsen Warns Citizens to Prepare for Potential ‘Military Invasion’

InternationalPakistan-Afghanistan Conflict: At Least 15 Civilians Killed, Over 100 Injured in Pakistani Artillery Fire in Kandahar

InternationalIndia to Reopen Embassy in Kabul Four Years After Taliban Takeover of Afghanistan

InternationalBulgarian MPs Clash in Parliament After EU Approves Plan to Replace National Currency With Euro by 2026; Video Goes Viral

International Realted Stories

InternationalWorld Bank president Ajay Banga backs jobs push, cites India model

InternationalNASA’s Artemis II nears earth return after historic record-breaking lunar mission

InternationalTrump warns Iran over Hormuz shipping

InternationalIranian FM warns US against letting Netanyahu 'kill diplomacy'

InternationalConflicts in Middle East could reshape global economy, says World Bank chief Ajay Banga