Afghan women devastated by new Taliban ban on medical training
Already barred from most fields and schools, the new government ban will leave women in Afghanistan uninformed and at risk.
Afghan women are in despair after learning female healthcare students will be barred from medical training. The proposed new ban comes after women were forced out of universities in Afghanistan two years ago by the Taliban government.
For Saja, studying nursing at a healthcare institute in Kabul was her last lifeline. She wanted to make something of herself.
The government has crushed this ambition by ordering, according to multiple sources, the exclusion of Afghan women from medical training, sparking panic across institutions.
When she heard the news, Saja, who had been at university before women were barred, said it felt like “reliving the same nightmare”.
“This was my last hope to do something, to become something,” said Saja, which is not her real name.
“Everything has been taken away from us for the crime of being a girl.”
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The authorities have made no official comment or confirmation, nor have they responded to the numerous condemnations and calls to reverse a decision that further blocks women’s access to education.
Since their 2021 return to power, the Taliban government has imposed reams of restrictions on women, making Afghanistan the only country to ban girls from education after primary school.
Directors and employees of health training centres have told Agence France-Presse (AFP) they were informed in recent days of the order, issued by the Taliban supreme leader and passed down verbally by the health ministry, to expel women students until further notice.
Institutes across the country – which many women had turned to after the university ban – were given a few days to organise final exams.
However, there is much confusion without an explicit announcement or document clarifying the rules.
Some institutions told AFP they would operate as usual until they received written orders, while others closed immediately or scrambled to hold exams before shuttering.
“Everyone is confused, and no one is sharing what is really happening,” said Saja, who was in her first year at a private institute.
“We were giving two or three exams each day... even though we already finished our exams a few months back,” said the 22-year-old, adding they had to pay fees to sit the exams.
“We received a lot of concerned messages from students and teachers wanting to know what is going on and asking if there is any hope”, a director of a Kabul private institute said. The institute has 1,100 students, 700 of whom are women.
“No one is happy,” he told AFP.
His office is just steps away from the women’s classroom. The last lesson on the board advises how to manage stress and depression in patients.
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According to a source within the health ministry, 35,000 women are currently students in some 10 public and more than 150 private institutes offering two-year diplomas in subjects including nursing, midwifery, dentistry and laboratory work.
Non-governmental organisation Norwegian Afghanistan Committee (NAC) trains 588 women in institutes managed in collaboration with the health ministry. It was verbally informed classes were “temporarily suspended”, a command that is “equally seriously as a written document”, according to the committee’s country director, Terje Magnusson Watterdal.
“There are a lot of people high up within the current government that are quite opposed to this decision,” he added.
He hopes, at the minimum, public institutes will reopen to women.
The United Nations (UN) is calling this part of the ongoing gender apartheid in Afghanistan. Along with other international organisations, it is warning of devastating consequences in a country where maternal and infant mortality are among the world’s highest.
If implemented, the reported new ban will undoubtedly lead to unnecessary suffering, illness and deaths of Afghan women and children, both now and in future generations. This amounts to femicide, UN experts warned.
Midwifery students are especially passionate about their studies, according to Magnusson Watterdal.
“So many of these young women have been motivated to become a midwife because they have lost a mother or an aunt or a sister in childbirth,” he said.
“It’s not just a profession you choose; it’s a vocation. So, of course, there’s great desperation” among students and staff.
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According to sources and images circulated on social media, small protests have been held in parts of Afghanistan.
Assal, another student using a pseudonym, received an expedited diploma last week but has little hope of finding a job in a country where unemployment is widespread and opportunities for women are increasingly limited.
“I wanted to practise medicine and study further,” the 20-year-old told AFP.
“They had already taken everything from us. Next thing, we won’t even be allowed to breathe.”