Afghan women kept out of UN-led Doha talks with Taliban
The UN-led meeting with the Taliban scheduled to take place in Qatar on June 30, has met with strong criticism from Afghan and international activists for excluding women.
The two-day conference will see the participation of special envoys from 25 countries hoping to engage the Taliban on a range of issues, including the economy, aid, narcotics and security.
The absence of women, however, will undermine any meaningful discussion, Afghan women activists pointed out.
“I don’t have words to express my frustration,” said Fawzia Koofi, a former Afghan parliamentarian and women’s rights activist. “Because the same institution that is supposed to protect world order, justice and dignity of human beings is betraying us this time.”
Since taking over Afghanistan in 2021, the Taliban have severely restricted women’s rights and freedoms including a ban on higher education, employment, public and political participation and even imposed control on movement.
“Yet again, they [the UN] are going along the same rhetoric that the Taliban have maintained and affirming the Taliban’s actions of excluding women as correct,” Ms Koofi added.
Her concerns were echoed by several Afghan women activists inside and outside the country.
“It’s terrifying,” said Fereshta Abbasi, a researcher at Human Rights Watch. “It's a clear violation of the UN’s Resolution 1325.”
She referred to the UN resolution that requires “women’s equal participation and full involvement in all efforts for the maintenance and promotion of peace and security”.
“For three years, Afghan women have had their every right violated,” she said. “The women need to be part of this.”
Afghan women living under Taliban rule – in pictures
Women wash freshly dyed silk in a factory in Herat province. Whether Afghan girls receive an education under the Taliban is turning into an issue of wealth, young women living under the regime say. AFP
Afghan women walk in a Kandahar market. Even if Afghan girls can receive an education, the likelihood they will be able to put it to any use is low. AFP
An Afghan women weaves silk to make scarfs and other products inside a workshop in the Zandajan district of Herat province. Many Afghan girls fear the longer they stay away from school, the more pressure will build to conform to patriarchal standards and marry. AFP
Burqa-clad women work in a shampoo factory in Kandahar. AFP
Women make flatbread in a factory in Kandahar. AFP
An Afghan woman begs as Taliban fighters stand guard in Kabul. Amnesty International says the Taliban have breached women's and girls' rights to education, work and free movement since they took control of the government. EPA
Afghan women take a selfie at a park in Kabul. The rates of child, early and forced marriage in Afghanistan are increasing under Taliban rule, Amnesty International has said. EPA
Afghan girls paint at a workshop class in Herat. The World Bank estimates that for each year of secondary education, the likelihood of marrying before the age of 18 decreases by five percentage points or more. AFP
Afghan women protest in Kabul. The lives of Afghan women and girls are being destroyed by the Taliban’s crackdown on their human rights, Amnesty has said. AP
An Afghan woman walks in a graveyard in Kabul. EPA
Shgofe, an Afghan newscaster, presents a programme on private channel 1TV in Kabul. Female TV presenters and reporters in Afghanistan continue to appear with their faces covered to comply with a mandate issued by the Taliban. EPA
An Afghan family walk past a market near the Pul-e Khishti Mosque in Kabul. AFP
People at Wazir Akbar Khan Hill in Kabul. Whether Afghan girls receive an education under the Taliban is turning into an issue of wealth, young women living under the regime say. AFP
Shahla Arif Yar, an Afghan women's rights activist attends an event in Kabul. Activists gathered to demand that the Taliban government give more rights to women, open up high schools to girls and include women in an assembly of scholars and leaders known as Loya Jirga. EPA
Women browse through garments and fabrics for sale in a stall at a women's handicraft market in Herat. AFP
Brides wait for the start of a mass wedding in Kabul. Dozens of Afghan women, concealed in thick green shawls, were married off in an austere ceremony attended by hundreds of guests and gun-toting Taliban fighters. AFP
Afghan women on the streets of Kabul take the initiative to exhibit their books, on the occasion of Book Week. A number of women exhibitors have launched a bookstore in the Afghan capital with the aim of promoting reading. EPA
Afghan girls study inside a one-classroom private educational centre in the Panjwai district of Kandahar. AFP
The complete absence of Afghan women from the conference had not gone unnoticed, with outrage from prominent leaders around the globe.
Malala Yousafzai called the UN’s decision to exclude Afghan women “unacceptable”, in a statement issued on Wednesday.
“It sends all the wrong signals that the world leaders are willing to accommodate the Taliban’s demands and that the girls’ and women’s rights in Afghanistan are not a top priority,” she said.
“There can be no legitimate discussion about Afghanistan's future without women's full participation and leadership,” she said, adding that the Taliban’s “systematic erasure of rights, dignity and livelihoods … amounts to gender apartheid”.
An open letter by the 2024 Global Women Leaders Summit, signed by prominent female political leaders including Hillary Clinton, Julia Gillard and Sanna Marin, among others, called for “Afghan women’s active and direct inclusion” in the talks.
“The international community’s exclusion of Afghan women is outrageous; it will marginalise their voices and undermine their rights,” the letter read. “We must not open a pathway for the Taliban to gain broader legitimacy.”
Allowing the Taliban to dictate the terms of the Doha dialogue “legitimises their draconian abuses, which amount to gender apartheid”, the letter said.
Sanna Marin was among the signatories of an open letter calling for the 'direct inclusion' of women in the upcoming talks. AFP
It is the first such meeting that will include the participation of the Taliban, who refused to attend meetings in March this year and in May 2023.
It was reported that the Taliban set conditions for taking part in the Doha 3 conference, including no discussion of human rights issues.
While the Taliban did not confirm this, a statement on their website defended their demands for “conditional participation” in international meetings.
No Bennet
Afghan women activists have pointed out the UN’s own Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, will not be at the Doha meeting.
Mr Bennett recently presented his report to the UN’s Human Rights Council detailing “systematic violations of women’s and girls’ fundamental rights” in Afghanistan.
“The irony is that the UN is comfortable to engage with this notorious group, the Taliban, whose gender persecution and gender apartheid is confirmed by UN’s own special rapporteur,” said Samira Hamidi, an Afghan women’s rights activist.
The UN has not only ignored the voices of Afghan women and girls but has breached it is own principles, she said, adding this is not the first time that Afghan women have been sidelined in discussions concerning them.
“It is important to note that before the collapse [of the Afghan government], the situation was the same,” she said, urging international envoys and other participants to boycott the meeting.
United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Afghanistan Richard Bennett will not be at the Doha meeting. AP
A call for a boycott of the Doha meeting was issued on Monday by the Organisation for Policy Research and Development Studies (DROPS) a women-led research organisation from Afghanistan featuring voices from more than 100 Afghan women inside and outside the country.
“This UN concession to secure the participation of Taliban de facto authorities is a stark betrayal of Afghan women and of our shared values,” said Mariam Safi, executive director of DROPS, explaining the BoycottDoha3.
The campaign calls for women’s rights to be on the Doha agenda and for women and civil society to be at the table during the Doha meetings.
When women are excluded, “those processes become unsustainable and ultimately fail as we saw with the US-Taliban Doha talks and the Intra-Afghan peace negotiations,” she said, referring to the talks that led to the withdrawal of US forces and the eventual collapse of the Afghan government.
Little support
Though the Intra-Afghan talks had four Afghan women, their representation was inadequate and they received little support from the stakeholders involved and were constantly subjected to discrimination and criticism, Ms Safi said.
Ms Koofi, who was among the four women who were part of the pre-Taliban peace negotiations, also emphasised the need for women’s participation.
“We [the international community] fail to recognise the relevance between women's participation and how it impacts peace and security, let alone that this is a matter of fundamental human rights enshrined in the UN charter that they need to protect,” she said.
And even if it wasn’t part of the UN charter, Ms Koofi added, “women’s inclusion is crucial to security, economy and other issues” that the stakeholders at the Doha conference hope to achieve.
“Doha meetings will not be considered legitimate or credible by Afghan women’s groups and civil society organisations if women are not on the agenda, women are not at the table,” Ms Safi agreed.