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Guterres, Amina Mohammed condemn Taliban ban on women working for UN

Taliban ended the rights of women and girls by introducing a ban on secondary schooling, higher education, working for non-governmental organisations, etc.

• April 6, 2023
António Guterres and Amina Mohammed
António Guterres and Amina Mohammed

UN secretary general António Guterres has condemned the Taliban ban on Afghan women working for the United Nations, describing it as violating their inalienable fundamental human rights.

Mr Guterres, in a statement by his spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, said the latest escalation of the de facto authorities’ suppression of women violated their obligations under international human rights.

“It violates Afghanistan’s obligations under international human rights law and infringes on the principle of non-discrimination, which is a core tenet underpinning the United Nations Charter,” he said.

Since staging a coup in August 2021, the Taliban has steadily eroded the rights of women and girls in public life. It has ended the right of women and girls by introducing a ban on secondary schooling, higher education, working for non-governmental organisations, and their rights to freedom of movement.

Bans are already in force, preventing women from working, studying, and travelling without male chaperones.

The UN chief said female staff members were essential for all UN operations directed by the Assistance Mission in the country (UNAMA), including the delivery of life-saving assistance.

“The enforcement of this decision will harm the Afghan people, millions of whom are in need of this assistance. The secretary-general calls on the Taliban to immediately revoke the decision and reverse all measures that restrict women’s and girls’ rights to work, education and freedom of movement,” he said.

In the same vein, deputy secretary general, Amina Mohammed, described the latest escalation of the de facto authorities’ suppression of women as a violation of their inalienable fundamental human rights.

Speaking with journalists at UN Headquarters in New York on Wednesday, ahead of a sustainable development report briefing, Ms Mohammed recalled the plight of women in Afghanistan in her last visit to the country.

The UN deputy chief said that she had met many of the women now facing a ban and the loss of their livelihoods in a visit to Afghanistan at the beginning of the year.

“We reiterate that both Afghan women and men are essential to all aspects of our work,” she said, adding that the UN is taking all possible measures right now to support its national female staff at this difficult time.

She said UN national female staff would continue to receive their salaries, but until further clarification is received, all national staff – both men and women – are being told not to report to the office.

(NAN)

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