Afghan women say life has returned to how it was 20 years ago: 'This is a man ruling country'
Fox News national security correspondent Jennifer Griffin reports from the Pentagon on the degradation of women's rights one year after the U.S. military's retreat from Afghanistan on 'Special Report.'This article is part of a Fox News Digital series examining the consequences of the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan one year ago this week.
"Nowhere else in the world has there been as wide-spread, systematic and all-encompassing an attack on the rights of women and girls – every aspect of their lives is being restricted under the guise of morality and through the instrumentalization of religion," the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said in an August statement.
An Afghan woman leaves an underground school, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, July 30, 2022. She attends this underground school with her daughter who is not allowed to go to public school.The Taliban have also reportedly begun instituting harsh brands of justice not widely seen since before the U.S.-led military coalition in 2001, including stoning practices and chopping off the hands of accused thieves.
"That’s the kind of politics the Taliban are playing," suggesting the insurgent group is attempting to appear"good" in the eyes of the world as it looks for international financial support. In addition, the U.N. warned that if the Taliban continue their oppressive polices and lack of"an inclusive and representative government," the prospect of"peace, reconciliation and stability will remain minimal."
"Previously they could go to the government, and they could go to the court. They could talk to someone and submit a complaint against their husband," the Afghan evacuee said referring to the Taliban's closure of the Women's Affairs Ministry in September 2021."But right now the Taliban aren’t listening."
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