No woman in Afghanistan will now be able to train as a doctor, dentist, nurse or researcher in the areas of health. , the supreme leader of the fundamentalist Taliban movement, who has governed the country since 2021, approved last Monday a decree that adds to a previous one that already prohibits women from being treated by male medical professionals in some provinces of the country. In practice, this decision forces women to “”, denounced Human Rights Watch (HRW).
The new decree was announced by , after a meeting at the Ministry of Public Health in Kabul, according to the BBC. At the beginning of this year, the NGO stated in 38 pages that the “drastic reduction in financial and technical support (…) has seriously harmed the country’s health system.” At the same time, many health professionals “left the country or resigned from their jobs” after .
Already before the arrival of the fundamentalists to power, in 2021, the Asian country’s health care depended entirely on international support and the resources of the Afghans themselves: of the 2.8 billion dollars invested in health in 2019, 20 % was contributed by large donors (mainly the World Bank, USAID and the EU), 3% by the State and 77% was paid by citizens. Before his overthrow, the Ghani government also failed to make the necessary investments to ensure the sustainability of the public health system and, due to corruption, “several clinics built with donor money in some districts were empty: ghost clinics without staff,” highlights the HRW report.
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In a heartbreaking video, female students at the Badakhshan Medical Institute in Afghanistan are seen singing and weeping in the hallways, devastated by the Taliban’s decision to ban women from studying midwifery and nursing.
— End Gender Apartheid (@EGACampaign)
Humanitarian aid organizations have assumed part of the health care of the 40 million Afghans, but measures such as the one adopted this Monday by Ajundzada aggravate a situation in which NGOs already face shortages of medicines and health care equipment. Regarding the ban on women being treated by male health professionals in some provinces, HRW has reported that there is “a lack of clarity about these rules and the fact that they may differ depending on location.” After making this decision, the Taliban have summoned the directors of private medical institutions to inform them that they will no longer be able to teach female students.
The siege that the Taliban has imposed on Afghan women has tightened since — in September 2021 — the fundamentalists secondary school after the sixth grade. In December 2022, his . Women’s rights defenders have “faced serious retaliation” by the Taliban, with physical attacks, arbitrary detentions, torture, sexual violence and forced disappearance, HRW denounces. According to the NGO, this regime “has imposed rules that systematically violate the rights of women and girls in most aspects of their lives,” to the point that “they cannot even go to a gym or walk down a street.” park,” denounced Sahar Fetrat, women’s rights expert at HRW.
The executive director of Unicef, Catherine Russell, has regretted the new decision of the Taliban: “this ban would further limit the ability of women to contribute to society and would have consequences for the health of the Afghan people,” she said on Wednesday in her account of X. For his part, the charge d’affaires of the United Kingdom in Afghanistan, Robert C. Dickson, described the information as “”. The European Union also in a statement, in which it stressed that the decision is “an unjustifiable attack on women’s access to education.” The Taliban authorities have not confirmed the measure to the press, they emphasize y .
. is alarmed by reports that the de facto authorities in plan to ban women from studying in medical faculties.
A ban would further limit women’s ability to contribute to society & have consequences for the health of the Afghan people.
— Catherine Russell (@unicefchief)
Several medical students told American public radio NPR that this week they were not allowed to attend classes. The station highlights that, in February of this year, women had been able to access nursing and midwifery courses thanks to an “important legal loophole”, linked to the prohibition of medical care for women by male health professionals . That door—one more of those left open for Afghan women—has been slammed shut.