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Afghanistan: School Girls Drop Out Over Dress Code Issues

As the Taliban regime takes more time to set out rules for women’s school education, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) expressed that because of the inconvenience of new limitations on the dress of female students and instructors in certain territories of Afghanistan, a few students have exited the school.

As indicated by the report, the Taliban shut one school in Balkh region for a considerable length of time after certain students had their countenances uncovered. As indicated by an authority from the school, the Taliban requested the terminating of an educator for her “shameless” dress.

One more school presently has an educator doled out to “forestall bad habit and advance excellence”, the HRW report said.

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“The necessities on hijab are getting harder step by step,” an educator said, adding: “They (Taliban) have spies to record and report… On the off chance that students or educators don’t keep their severe hijab guidelines, with practically no conversation they fire the instructors and oust the students.”

Heather Barr, partner ladies’ privileges chief at the HRW, said: “The Taliban is forcing progressively severe clothing regulations on the two students and educators and implementing these clothing standards by ousting students, terminating instructors and, surprisingly, shutting down the whole school.

“The students have let us know they imagine that this is a work by the Taliban to persuade them to leave school.” In the interim, Rina Amiri, the US Special Representative for Human Rights and Women in Afghanistan, condemned the end of young ladies’ schools in Afghanistan, saying it is taking Afghanistan in a “negative heading”, TOLO News announced.

“The circumstance of ladies and youngsters is proceeding to head down an extremely regrettable path. The more extended this go on in this manner without strong reaction from the Taliban, the more prominent the nation will endure additional staggering fallouts,” Amiri said.

Yet, the Ministry of Education said it is prepared to open young ladies’ schools over the 6th grade assuming the initiative calls for it.

Notwithstanding worldwide responses, the restriction on young ladies’ tutoring over the 6th grade has been met with broad responses from lawmakers, common society activists and religious scholars.

 

 

 

 

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