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Taliban decrees on clothing and male guardians leave Afghan women scared to go out alone, says UN

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ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN -

Afghan women feel scared or unsafe leaving their homes alone because of Taliban decrees and enforcement campaigns on clothing and male guardians, according to a report from the UN mission in Afghanistan.

The report, issued Friday, comes days before a UN-convened meeting in the Qatari capital is set to start, with member states and special envoys to Afghanistan due to discuss engagement with the Taliban and the country's crises, including the human rights situation.

The Taliban 鈥 which took over Afghanistan in 2021 during the final weeks of U.S. and NATO withdrawal from the country 鈥 have barred women from most areas of public life and stopped girls from going to school beyond the sixth grade as part of harsh measures they imposed despite initial promises of a more moderate rule.

They are also restricting women鈥檚 access to work, travel and health care if they are unmarried or don鈥檛 have a male guardian, and arresting those who don鈥檛 comply with the Taliban鈥檚 interpretation of hijab, or Islamic headscarf.

The UN mission鈥檚 report, published Friday, said the decrees are being enforced through arrest, harassment and intimidation. Women said they increasingly fear going to public spaces owing to the threat of arrest and the 鈥渓ong-lasting stigma and shame鈥 associated with being taken into police custody.

Over half of the women interviewed for the report felt unsafe leaving the house without a male guardian, or mahram. Risks to their security and their anxiety levels worsened whenever a new decree was announced specifically targeting them, the report said.

Women who went out with a mahram felt safer but noted the stress from depending on another person to accompany them. Some said their male guardians chided them for 鈥渨asting time鈥 if they wanted to visit certain shops or stray from a route limited to performing basic necessary tasks.

This undercut chances to 鈥渆njoy even micro-moments of stimulation or leisure鈥 outside the home, said the report.

Some women said that male relatives were also afraid and reluctant to leave the home with female relatives, as this would expose them to Taliban harassment.

A spokesman from the Vice and Virtue Ministry, the Taliban's morality police that enforces such decrees, said it was 鈥渘onsense and untrue鈥 that women are scared to go to the shops.

鈥淭here is no problem for those sisters (women) who have observed hijab,鈥 said Abdul Ghafar Farooq. 鈥淎s women are naturally weaker than men, then Shariah (Islamic law) has called mahrams essential when traveling with them for the sake of their dignity and respect.鈥

He said harassing women was against the law.

Heather Barr, from Human Rights Watch, told the Associated Press that Afghan women鈥檚 fear of leaving home unaccompanied was 鈥渄amning and devastating" but not surprising.

It seemed to be a specific goal of the Taliban to frighten women and girls out of leaving their homes, Barr said.

鈥淭his begs the question of what on earth this discussion is in Doha, with the UN hosting special envoys," she said. "We need to be asking why the focus of this meeting and every meeting isn鈥檛 about this crisis that is unprecedented for women around the world.鈥

The Taliban are not attending the Doha meeting, their chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a voice note to the AP on Saturday night.

A Foreign Ministry statement said participation would only be beneficial if the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, as the Taliban call their administration, are the sole and official representative for the country at the talks.

The UN envoy for Afghanistan last year warned the Taliban that international recognition as the country鈥檚 legitimate government will remain 鈥渘early impossible鈥 unless they lift the restrictions on women.

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