Talibians begin upholding Islamic standards, no woman dares face public

Women in Afghanistan won't dare, under any circumstances, go public with uncovered faces. This is the latest decision by Islamic Taliban ruling this country. The decision will be monitored by the Afghan Ministry for Vess and Virtue, while the perpetrators will also be family members of women, including cousins, [...]
Islamic Taliban governing Afghanistan have ordered all women to cover their faces in public in Afghanistan.
This restrictive measure is the last of many to have stripped women of almost every right, including the ban on traveling alone over long distances, and on continuing middle-level education.
This cruel decision, his doers make them the family members of women, including cousins, and their bosses where they work.
If their faces are seen in public, their male “guardian will be fined, then imprisoned. If the woman who appears uncovered or her relative works for the government, they should be fired.
The decision says that women should not leave their homes whenever possible, saying that this was the best <x0) option to respect the hygiene hyzab”, essentially imposing the extreme traditions of conservative Islam above all women, indiscriminately.
“For all the dignified Afghan women wearing hyjab is necessary and the best hydzabi is the chador [the manka], which is part of our tradition and is respected,” said Shir Mohammad, an official from the Ministry for Ves and Virtue, at a conference in Kabul. Report AP.
All women who aren't too old or too young should cover their faces, except for their eyes. ”
The comprehensive, traditional stock market in Afghanistan allows women to look only through a small network. The alternative would be nibabi, which covers the face but not the eyes. While almost all the adult women in Afghanistan carry a hyjab form, many in cities cover only their hair.
The recent restrictions on women, part of a system of controls that activists have attacked as “apartid gynor”, will likely hinder the Taliban's demand for international recognition and support, while the country is facing a widespread economic crisis and hunger.
“Bota has become an observer of our pain, of an apartheid, a complete tyranny,” said on Twitter Shaharzad Akhbar, former director of the Independent Commission on Human Rights in Afghanistan, who now lives abroad.
So much pain and sorrow for the women of my country, my heart is bursting. So much hatred and anger against the Taliban, enemies of women, doers of the gender apartheid, enemies of Afghanistan and humanity.” added Akhbar.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Great Britain has said that Taliban could not hope for international recognition or an end to decisive sanctions if they do not meet obligations for protecting women's rights, writes The Guardina, Periscope is forwarded.
The responsibility for what happens in Afghanistan falls on the Taliban”, a spokesman from the ministry said.
We will judge them by their actions, not by their words. If they want international accession, they must meet their commitments and commitments, especially for the rights of women and girls. ”
The Taliban had promised to change over the two decades since leading Afghanistan as a brutal and poor theocracy in the late 1990s, where women were forbidden almost every job and education.
But since the coming to power last August, increasingly severe restrictions on women's rights suggest the pledge was rhetoric designed to ensure the departure of American forces, as many activists warned at the time. /Periscopi












