Berliner Boersenzeitung - Girls' education ban reveals deep rifts within Taliban

EUR -
AED 4.251002
AFN 80.433017
ALL 97.452225
AMD 444.464085
ANG 2.071339
AOA 1061.305952
ARS 1549.836784
AUD 1.789735
AWG 2.086154
AZN 1.973528
BAM 1.96143
BBD 2.33761
BDT 141.135115
BGN 1.955545
BHD 0.43639
BIF 3412.496941
BMD 1.157367
BND 1.49197
BOB 8.000032
BRL 6.37536
BSD 1.157723
BTN 101.560643
BWP 15.722996
BYN 3.804488
BYR 22684.395469
BZD 2.325606
CAD 1.594563
CDF 3344.790583
CHF 0.934346
CLF 0.028524
CLP 1118.999709
CNY 8.314645
CNH 8.320242
COP 4733.110688
CRC 584.97406
CUC 1.157367
CUP 30.670229
CVE 110.673211
CZK 24.599852
DJF 205.687453
DKK 7.461775
DOP 70.396846
DZD 150.857824
EGP 56.041982
ERN 17.360507
ETB 160.468846
FJD 2.619118
FKP 0.870901
GBP 0.870514
GEL 3.124065
GGP 0.870901
GHS 12.209691
GIP 0.870901
GMD 83.907706
GNF 10040.159819
GTQ 8.882496
GYD 242.228434
HKD 9.084996
HNL 30.496675
HRK 7.533275
HTG 151.92609
HUF 398.251779
IDR 18965.196243
ILS 4.001568
IMP 0.870901
INR 101.528352
IQD 1516.150922
IRR 48754.089863
ISK 142.796168
JEP 0.870901
JMD 185.251748
JOD 0.820609
JPY 170.775239
KES 149.880216
KGS 101.211307
KHR 4641.042206
KMF 492.455058
KPW 1041.657399
KRW 1604.874055
KWD 0.353784
KYD 0.964782
KZT 622.561627
LAK 24999.130117
LBP 103642.225014
LKR 348.169388
LRD 232.631175
LSL 20.713776
LTL 3.417404
LVL 0.700079
LYD 6.290274
MAD 10.51902
MDL 19.710834
MGA 5132.923232
MKD 61.707125
MMK 2429.282879
MNT 4157.963604
MOP 9.361392
MRU 46.181633
MUR 53.204448
MVR 17.818308
MWK 2009.764951
MXN 21.693341
MYR 4.892767
MZN 74.025345
NAD 20.70965
NGN 1769.141037
NIO 42.533114
NOK 11.876093
NPR 162.498437
NZD 1.961384
OMR 0.445021
PAB 1.157738
PEN 4.114417
PGK 4.786297
PHP 66.513563
PKR 327.014185
PLN 4.282593
PYG 8671.891867
QAR 4.213395
RON 5.074943
RSD 117.175306
RUB 92.58167
RWF 1668.344697
SAR 4.342689
SBD 9.541523
SCR 16.370999
SDG 694.996817
SEK 11.194167
SGD 1.490799
SHP 0.909509
SLE 26.740782
SLL 24269.414302
SOS 661.436685
SRD 42.787282
STD 23955.162582
STN 24.866032
SVC 10.130077
SYP 15048.34469
SZL 20.705177
THB 37.464261
TJS 10.894713
TMT 4.062359
TND 3.355209
TOP 2.710668
TRY 47.07398
TTD 7.855481
TWD 34.636295
TZS 2858.696574
UAH 48.268049
UGX 4143.894668
USD 1.157367
UYU 46.473398
UZS 14611.75973
VES 146.928699
VND 30380.886789
VUV 138.197218
WST 3.208763
XAF 657.853835
XAG 0.030604
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.127843
XCG 2.086571
XDR 0.815844
XOF 656.802654
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.172946
ZAR 20.733665
ZMK 10417.692491
ZMW 26.657749
ZWL 372.671739
  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.26

    +0.45%

  • BCC

    4.0600

    86.77

    +4.68%

  • GSK

    -0.3600

    37.32

    -0.96%

  • RBGPF

    -0.0800

    74.92

    -0.11%

  • SCS

    -0.6200

    15.96

    -3.88%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    14.35

    -1.05%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.07

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    72.28

    -0.51%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    55.84

    +0.52%

  • RIO

    -0.3000

    59.7

    -0.5%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    11.1

    +0.54%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.1200

    23.51

    -0.51%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    23.56

    +1.06%

  • RELX

    -1.3800

    50.59

    -2.73%

  • AZN

    -0.1100

    74.48

    -0.15%

  • BP

    1.1100

    33.6

    +3.3%

Advertisement Image
Girls' education ban reveals deep rifts within Taliban
Girls' education ban reveals deep rifts within Taliban / Photo: Ahmad SAHEL ARMAN - AFP/File

Girls' education ban reveals deep rifts within Taliban

The Taliban prohibition on girls' education shows the movement's ultra-conservatives retain tight control of the Islamist group, and exposes a power struggle that puts at risk crucial aid for Afghanistan's desperate population, experts say.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

The ban has triggered international outrage and even left many in the Taliban movement baffled by the decision.

"The order was devastating," a senior Taliban member told AFP. "The supreme leader himself interfered."

All Taliban officials who spoke to AFP on the subject did so on condition of anonymity, due to the sensitivity of the topic.

Secondary schools for girls were ordered to shut last month, just hours after being reopened for the first time since the Taliban's return to power in August.

The shocking U-turn came after a secret meeting of the group's leadership in the city of Kandahar, the Taliban's de facto power centre.

Officials have never justified the ban, apart from saying the education of girls must be according to "Islamic principles"

But one senior Taliban official told AFP that Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and some other senior figures were "ultra-conservative on this issue" and dominated the discussion.

Two groups -- the urban and the ultra-conservatives -- have emerged in the movement, he said.

"The ultra-conservatives have won this round," he added, referring to a group of clerics including Chief Justice Abdul Hakim Sharai, Minister for Religious Affairs Noor Mohammad Saqeb and Minister for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Mohammad Khalid Hanafi.

- Reimposing Kandahar's influence -

The clerics feel excluded from government decisions and voicing their opposition to girls' education is one way to restore their influence, said Ashley Jackson, a London-based researcher who has worked extensively on Afghanistan.

She told AFP the "outsized influence of this out-of-touch minority" has prevented the country from moving ahead with something the vast majority of Afghans favour -- including much of the leadership.

"It shows that Kandahar remains the centre of gravity for Taliban politics," said International Crisis Group analyst Graeme Smith.

A senior Taliban member said the hardliners were trying to appease thousands of fighters who hail from the deeply conservative countryside.

"For them, even if a woman steps out of her home it is immoral. So, imagine what it means to educate her," he said.

The Taliban member said Akhundzada was against "modern, secular education" as he associated it with life under former Western-backed presidents Hamid Karzai and Ashraf Ghani.

"That's his worldview."

The Taliban returned to power last year as US-led forces ended an occupation in place since an invasion ousted the hardliners in 2001.

In the 20 years between the Taliban's two reigns, girls were allowed to go to school and women were able to seek employment in all sectors, though the country remained socially conservative.

Activist and Islamic scholar Tafsir Siyaposh noted girls in Afghanistan have always studied in single-sex classes and followed an Islamic curriculum, so the ban shows the Taliban just wanted to "oppress the rights of women by giving excuses".

- Blow to foreign aid -

A Taliban source in Pakistan confirmed differences at the leadership level on the issue, but said the movement was in no danger of fragmenting.

"There is a debate on this issue ... but we are trying to overcome our shortcomings," he said.

Still, analysts say the ban was a blow to Taliban efforts to gain international recognition and to raise aid to address Afghanistan's humanitarian crisis.

Jackson said neither Akhundzada nor those closest to him "fully understood or appreciated" the consequences of their edict for an international community that has linked official recognition to the group's respect for women's rights.

Even some senior Taliban officials agree.

"We are telling them (the ultra-conservatives) that running a country is different from running a madrassa," said one Taliban official from Kandahar, using the term for an Islamic school.

"Everything was going smooth until this harsh order came. And it came from our leader so we have to follow it -- but we are trying to change it," he said.

The ban reduces the willingness of governments to cooperate with the Taliban said the ICG's Smith.

"It raises the question of who exactly they should speak with inside the Taliban."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)

Advertisement Image