Current:Home > FinanceAfghanistan school year begins without classes as students unaware and teen girls barred -AssetTrainer
Afghanistan school year begins without classes as students unaware and teen girls barred
View
Date:2025-04-14 11:38:48
Kabul — Afghanistan's schools reopened Tuesday for the new academic year, but no classes were held as students were unaware of the start and hundreds of thousands of teenage girls remain barred from attending class. Afghanistan is the only country in the world where girls are prohibited from going to secondary school and universtity.
Taliban authorities have imposed an austere interpretation of Islam since storming back to power in August 2021 after the withdrawal of the U.S.-led foreign forces that backed the previous governments during 20 years of war with the extremist group.
- "I felt like I was dead": The impact of the Taliban's ban on women at college
The education ministry made no public announcement of the reopening of schools, teachers and parents told CBS News, and as the date has long been marked in the country as the start of the new year, under the Persian tradition of Nowruz, most people assumed it was still a public holiday. The Taliban have seemingly stopped official celebrations of the holiday, but failed to notify students' families that school would be in session.
"A letter issued by the minister of education was given to us by our principal to reopen the school today, but since no public announcement was made, no students came," said Mohammad Osman Atayi, a teacher at the Saidal Naseri Boys High School in Kabul.
AFP journalists toured seven schools in Kabul and saw only a few teachers and primary students arriving — but no classes were held.
"We did not send children to school in Kabul today because it's the new year holiday," Ranna Afzali, who worked as a TV journalist in Kabul before losing her job when the Taliban returned to power, told CBS News' Sami Yousafzai. "In the past, the new year used to be a public holiday all over Afghanistan, but the Taliban terminated the holiday, so the schools were open but attendance was almost nil."
Schools also reopened in provinces including Herat, Kunduz, Ghazni and Badakhshan but no lessons were held there either, AFP correspondents reported.
Tuesday's start of the new academic year coincided with Nowruz, the Persian New Year, celebrated widely in Afghanistan before the Taliban returned to power but now unacknowledged by the country's new rulers.
Hundreds of thousands of teenage girls meanwhile remain barred from secondary school.
"The Taliban have snatched everything away from us," said 15-year-old Sadaf Haidari, a resident of Kabul who should have started grade 11 this year. "I am depressed and broken."
- Afghan girls describe escaping from the Taliban
The ban on girls' secondary education came into effect in March last year, just hours after the education ministry reopened schools for both girls and boys.
Taliban leaders — who have also banned women from university education — have repeatedly claimed they will reopen secondary schools for girls once "conditions" have been met, from obtaining funding to remodelling the syllabus along Islamic lines.
The international community has made the right to education for women a key condition in negotiations over aid and recognition of the Taliban government.
No country has officially recognised the Taliban as Afghanistan's legitimate rulers.
Afghanistan under the Taliban government is the "most repressive country in the world" for women's rights, the United Nations has said. Women have been effectively squeezed out of public life, removed from most government jobs or are paid a fraction of their former salary to stay at home. They are also barred from going to parks, fairs, gyms and public baths, and must cover up in public.
In a statement released earlier this month to mark International Women's Day, the U.N. mission to Afghanistan blasted the Taliban regime's "singular focus on imposing rules that leave most women and girls effectively trapped in their homes."
"It has been distressing to witness their methodical, deliberate, and systematic efforts to push Afghan women and girls out of the public sphere," Roza Otunbayeva, special representative of the U.N. secretary-general and head of the U.N. mission to Afghanistan, said in the statement.
- In:
- Taliban
- War
- Civil Rights
- Education
veryGood! (9319)
Related
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Border arrests are expected to rise slightly in August, hinting 5-month drop may have bottomed out
- Is there an AT&T outage? Why your iPhone may be stuck in SOS mode.
- RFK Jr. sues North Carolina elections board as he seeks to remove his name from ballot
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Gen Z wants an inheritance. Good luck with that, say their boomer parents
- School is no place for cellphones, and some states are cracking down
- Is there an AT&T outage? Why your iPhone may be stuck in SOS mode.
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- The Week 1 feedback on sideline-to-helmet communications: lots of praise, some frustration
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- After an Atlantic hurricane season pause, are the tropics starting to stir?
- San Francisco 49ers rookie Ricky Pearsall released from hospital after shooting
- Rapper Fatman Scoop dies at 53 after collapsing on stage
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- 2024 US Open is wide open on men's side. So we ranked who's most likely to win
- Moms for Liberty fully embraces Trump and widens role in national politics as election nears
- Youth football safety debate is rekindled by the same-day deaths of 2 young players
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Is there an AT&T outage? Why your iPhone may be stuck in SOS mode.
Detroit Mayor Duggan putting political pull behind Vice President Harris’ presidential pursuit
1 dead, 2 hospitalized after fights lead to shooting in Clairton, Pennsylvania: Police
Sam Taylor
Police say 1 teen dead, another injured in shooting at outside Michigan State Fair
Inside Zendaya and Tom Holland's Marvelous Love Story
Teenager Kimi Antonelli to replace Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes in 2025