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Taliban-led Afghan administration suspends women from universities; two detained Americans released

Kabul, Afghanistan
Reuters

Afghanistan’s Taliban-run higher education ministry on Tuesday suspended access to universities by female students until further notice, drawing strong condemnation from the United States, Britain and the United Nations. 

A letter, confirmed by a spokesperson for the higher education ministry, instructed Afghan public and private universities to suspend access to female students immediately, in accordance with a Cabinet decision.

Afghanistan Kabul Kabul Education University women

A member of Taliban speaks with female students outside the Kabul Education University in Kabul, Afghanistan, on 26th February. PICTURE: Reuters/Stringer/File photo.

The announcement by the Taliban administration, which has not been internationally recognised, came as the United Nations Security Council met in New York on Afghanistan. 

Foreign governments, including the United States, have said that a change in policies on women’s education is needed before it can consider formally recognising the Taliban-run administration, which is also subject to heavy sanctions. 

TALIBAN RELEASE TWO AMERICANS DETAINED IN AFGHANISTAN – US STATE DEPARTMENT

Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban on Tuesday released two American nationals in what appeared to be a goodwill gesture, said State Department spokesperson Ned Price, who indicated that the militants were holding other US citizens.

Price declined to identify the freed Americans, and he said they were not released as “part of any swap of prisoners or detainees. There was no money that changed hands.”

“We are providing these two US nationals with all appropriate assistance. They will soon be reunited with their loved ones and we are absolutely gratified to see that,” he told a State Department news briefing.

“We understand this, or at least the Taliban characterized this to us, as a goodwill gesture,” said Price.

The pair was released three months after the Taliban freed Mark Frerichs, an American engineer, in an exchange for Bashir Noorzai, a convicted drug smuggler held by the United States since 2005 and granted clemency by US President Joe Biden.

Earlier this month, Moscow freed Britney Griner, a US women’s basketball star and two-time Olympic gold medalist who was imprisoned in Russia on drug charges, in exchange for Viktor Bout, a convicted Russian arms dealer jailed in the United States and known as the “merchant of death.”

Asked if there were other Americans being detained in Afghanistan, Price indicated there were.

“We continue to raise with the Taliban the need for the immediate release of any of US nationals detained in Afghanistan, but I’m not in a position to offer specifics,” he said.

The United States has held regular contacts with the Taliban since US-led forces completed a withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021 after 20 years of war as the Western-backed former government collapsed and the militants seized Kabul.

The Taliban-run government has not been internationally recognised, with Washington and other foreign governments decrying the militants’ human rights record, especially their treatment of women.

– HUMEYRA PAMUK and DAPHNE PSALEDAKIS/Reuters

“The Taliban cannot expect to be a legitimate member of the international community until they respect the rights of all Afghans, especially the human rights and fundamental freedom of women and girls,” US Deputy UN Ambassador Robert Wood told the council, describing the move as “absolutely indefensible.”

In Washington, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said the United States will look to see what more it can do to hold the Taliban to account. 

Britain’s UN Ambassador Barbara Woodward said the suspension was “another egregious curtailment of women’s rights and a deep and profound disappointment for every single female student.”

“It is also another step by the Taliban away from a self-reliant and prosperous Afghanistan,” she told the council.

In March, the Taliban drew criticism from many foreign governments and some Afghans for making a U-turn on signals all girls’ high schools would be opened. 

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the move on Tuesday was “clearly another broken promise from the Taliban.”

“It’s another very troubling move and it’s difficult to imagine how the country can develop, deal with all of the challenges that it has, without active participation of women and the education of women,” he told reporters in New York. 

UN special envoy for Afghanistan Roza Otunbayeva said in a statement that the decision was “devastating.” 

Shortly before the announcement from Kabul, Otunbayeva told the Security Council that the closure of high schools had “undermined” the Taliban administration’s relationship with the international community and was “extremely unpopular among Afghans and even within the Taliban leadership.”

“As long as girls remain excluded from school and the de facto authorities continue to disregard other stated concerns of the international community, we remain at something of an impasse,” she said. 

The decision came as many university students were sitting end-of-term exams. One mother of a university student, who asked not to be named for security reasons, said her daughter called her in tears when she heard of the letter, fearing she could no longer continue her medical studies in Kabul. 

“The pain that not only I…and [other] mothers have in our heart, could not be described. We are all feeling this pain, they are worried for the future of their children,” she said.

–  Additional reporting by MICHELLE NICHOLS

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