Nearly five years after the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan, the systematic removal of women from public life continues with chilling consistency. Since 2021, Afghan women and girls have faced sweeping restrictions that have effectively dismantled their rights to education, employment, movement, and civic participation, turning daily life into an exercise in enforced invisibility.
Girls remain barred from secondary and higher education. Women are excluded from most forms of paid employment, including roles in NGOs and humanitarian work that once served as lifelines for vulnerable communities. Strict mobility rules limit women’s ability to travel without male guardians, while public spaces—once sites of learning, work, and social contribution—have steadily closed their doors.
International bodies and human rights organizations have repeatedly warned that Afghanistan is now presiding over the most severe and comprehensive rollback of women’s rights in the world today. Yet despite global condemnation, the policies persist, enforced through decrees that leave little room for negotiation or dissent.
What makes this moment especially grave is how normalized the erasure is becoming. Restrictions are often introduced incrementally, framed as temporary or cultural, until the cumulative effect is total exclusion. Afghan women are not only denied opportunity; they are denied visibility, voice, and agency in the shaping of their own society.
From a personal perspective, this story is one of the hardest to report on—not because it is complex, but because it is painfully clear. When women are removed from classrooms, offices, and public decision-making, the issue is no longer about tradition or governance. It is about power asserting itself through silence. The absence of women from public life is not a side effect of conflict; it is a deliberate outcome.
What is also deeply troubling is the global fatigue surrounding Afghanistan. As new crises dominate headlines, the slow, bureaucratic dismantling of women’s lives risks becoming background noise. Yet history shows us that when the world looks away, oppression settles in more comfortably.
Afghan women have not disappeared because they lack ambition or resilience. They have been systematically pushed out. Their continued resistance—through underground education networks, quiet acts of defiance, and international advocacy—remains one of the most courageous stories of our time, even if it rarely makes front pages.
The situation in Afghanistan stands as a stark reminder that women’s rights are not permanently won. They require vigilance, global pressure, and moral clarity. When women are erased from public life anywhere, it signals not just a national failure, but a global one.
For Global Women Magazine, this story is not about Afghanistan alone. It is about what happens when power goes unchecked—and why the fight for women’s rights must remain urgent, visible, and uncompromising.
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