Slovak influencer Zuzana Strausz Plačková spent several weeks in Dubai, where her two children – son Dion and daughter Ayana – could not be missing by her side. This time she treated her brother Pavlo, his wife Barbora and mother Veronika to luxury. At the end of the vacation, he joined them husband René “Rendy” Strauszwhose work duties in Slovakia kept him up until then.
They are currently at home, but they can fondly remember the time spent together and the sunny weather. At the same time, she revealed to her fans on the social network that he plans to return to Dubai again in September. Although they immediately fell in love with the exotic destination, the customs of some Muslim countries are incomprehensible to a mother of two.
On Sunday, she shared a foreign article on Instagram, according to which they can in Afghanistan families to sell girls without their consent, and for breaking a wife’s bone, a man faces only 15 days in prison. “I can’t even read it. This can’t be reality! For this to happen in this century…” she reacted to the information. You can find a PHOTO post in the gallery.
The Taliban after their return to power in 2021, he completely repealed all previous laws protecting women from domestic violence. If a battered woman went to the police, she would most likely be arrested herself – either for she left home without her husband’s permission, or for the so-called moral transgression.
Plačková was shocked by the news from the end of May, according to which The Taliban in Afghanistan legalized the marriage of girls from the age of 9. International experts warn that this move essentially legalizes the rape of children. In addition, the regulation makes it impossible for women to ask for a divorce, even if they were manipulated into marriage by force. “That’s terrible! Sick,” she stated with horror a few days ago on the social network.
Afghan women without any rights
The United Nations (UN) currently openly refers to the situation in Afghanistan as “gender apartheid”, which in practice means the complete exclusion of women from society based on their gender. The country is currently the only place in the world where girls and women are banned from studying. The gates of schools remained closed to all girls over the age of 12, and women were completely blocked from entering universities.
Any attempt at clandestine home education is severely punished. In addition to the education system, women were also systematically excluded from the vast majority of professions. They are not allowed to work in offices or in management, and the movement has forbidden them to work even for domestic and international non-governmental organizations including the UN itself. Only doctors and nurses have a certain exception, but even they face huge restrictions.
Radical restrictions also affected their movement in the markets, due to which women’s entrepreneurship in the country almost completely disappeared. Women in Afghanistan have lost any right to free movement and public life. They cannot leave home without the accompaniment of a so-called mahram – that is, a man from the immediate familysuch as a husband, brother, son or father.
The Taliban also banned them from entering public parks, amusement parks, gyms or sports clubs. The last blow for their social life was dealt by the area the closing of all hair salons and beauty salons, which until then represented some of the last safe places for them to meet each other.