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The Taliban are entrenched in Afghanistan after 2 years of rule. Women and girls pay the price

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KABUL, Aug 14 (AP): The Taliban have settled in as rulers of Afghanistan, two years after they seized
power as U.S. and NATO forces withdrew from the country following two decades of war.
The Taliban face no significant opposition that could topple them. They have avoided internal
divisions by falling in line behind their ideologically unbending leader. They have kept a struggling
economy afloat, in part by holding investment talks with capital-rich regional countries, even as the
international community withholds formal recognition. They have improved domestic security
through crackdowns on armed groups such as the Islamic State, and say they are fighting corruption
and opium production.
But it’s their slew of bans on Afghan girls and women that dominated the Taliban’s second year in
charge. They barred them from parks, gyms, universities, and jobs at nongovernmental groups and
the United Nations – all in the space of a few months – allegedly because they weren’t wearing
proper hijab — the Islamic head covering — or violated gender segregation rules. These orders
followed a previous ban, issued in the first year of Taliban rule, on girls going to school beyond sixth
grade.
Here is a closer look at Taliban rule and where they are headed.
The Taliban say they are committed to implementing their interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, in
Afghanistan. This leaves no space for anything they think is foreign or secular, such as women
working or studying. It’s what drove them in the late 1990s, when they first seized power in
Afghanistan, and it propels them now, ever since they took control again on Aug. 15, 2021.
Their supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada has praised the changes imposed since the takeover,
claiming life improved for Afghan women after foreign troops left and the hijab became mandatory
again.
Foreign governments, rights groups, and global bodies condemned the restrictions. The U.N. said
they were a major obstacle to the Taliban gaining international recognition as the legitimate
government of Afghanistan. Overseas aid is drying up as major donors stop their funding, pulled in
different directions by other crises and worried their money might fall into Taliban hands.
The lack of funds, as well as the exclusion of Afghan women from delivering essential humanitarian
services, is hitting the population hard, pushing more people into poverty.
Nearly 80% of the previous, Western-backed Afghan government’s budget came from the
international community. That money — now largely cut off — financed hospitals, schools, factories
and government ministries. The COVID-19 pandemic, medical shortages, climate change and
malnutrition have made life more desperate for Afghans. Aid agencies have stepped into the breach
to provide basic services like health care.
Afghanistan is struggling with its third consecutive year of drought-like conditions, the ongoing
collapse in families’ income, and restrictions on international banking. It’s also still suffering from
decades of war and natural disasters.
The World Bank said last month that the local currency, the afghani, gained value against major
currencies. Customers can withdraw more money from individual deposits made before August 2021
and most civil servants are being paid. The World Bank described revenue collection as “healthy”
and said most basic items remained available, although demand is low.
The Taliban have held investment talks with countries in the region, including China and Kazakhstan.
They want sanctions removed and billions of dollars in frozen funds to be released, saying these
measures will alleviate the suffering of Afghans. But the international community will only take such
steps once the Taliban take certain actions, including lifting restrictions on women and girls.
It’s largely up to the Taliban leader, Akhundzada. The cleric counts like-minded government
ministers and Islamic scholars among his circle. He is behind the decrees on women and girls. His
edicts, framed in the language of Islamic law, are absolute. The bans will only be lifted if Akhundzada
orders it. Some Taliban figures have spoken out against the way decisions are made, and there has
been disagreement about the bans on women and girls. But the Taliban's chief spokesman
Zabihullah Mujahid slammed these reports as propaganda.

“The secret of their success is that they are united,” Abdul Salam Zaeef, who served as the Taliban
envoy to Pakistan when they ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s, said. “If someone expresses his opinion
or his thoughts, it doesn’t mean someone is against the leadership or will go to another side,” said
Zaeef who spent several years at the Guantanamo Bay detention center after the 2001 U.S. invasion.

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”Disagreements are put in front of the emir (Akhundzada) and he decides. They follow his word.”
Aid officials say the Taliban view recognition as an entitlement, not something to be negotiated. The
officials also cite high-level meetings with powerful states like China and Russia as signs that the
Taliban are building bilateral relations in their own way. Qatar’s prime minister met Akhundzada in
the southwestern Afghan city of Kandahar in June, the first-such publicly known meeting between
the supreme leader and a foreign official.
Even though the Taliban are officially isolated on the global stage, they appear to have enough
interactions and engagement for ties with countries to inch toward normalization. Cooperation with
the Taliban on narcotics, refugees and counter-terrorism is of interest globally, including to the
West. Countries like China, Russia and neighboring Pakistan want an end to sanctions.
“The political interactions are such that no country in the region is thinking of bringing Afghanistan
under their power or control,” said Zaeef. He said the Taliban’s foreign outreach is hampered by
blacklists preventing officials from traveling, and by lacking common ground with the rest of the
world.
There’s no armed or political opposition with enough domestic or foreign support to topple the
Taliban. A fighting force resisting Taliban rule from the Panjshir Valley north of Kabul is being
violently purged. Public protests are rare.
The Islamic State has struck high-profile targets in deadly bombings, including two government
ministries, but the militants lack fighters, money and other resources to wage a major offensive
against the Taliban.

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