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Press briefing by UN Women on the new Afghanistan Gender Alert

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Press briefing by UN Women on the new Afghanistan Gender Alert

Source: UN Women

Today, UN Women is releasing new data which shows that, despite this ban, the vast majority of Afghans – women and men alike – support girls’ education.

In a nationwide, door-to-door survey of more than 2,000 Afghans, more than 9 out of 10 said it was important for girls to continue their schooling

Support was overwhelming across the board: from men and women, in both urban and rural communities.

It is clear: Despite the existing bans, the Afghan people want their daughters to exercise their right to education

In a country where half the population lives in poverty, education is the difference between despair and possibility. 

These findings can be found in a new UN Women Gender Alert, spotlighting the normalization of the women’s rights crisis in Afghanistan, four years after the Taliban takeover. The Gender Alert comes one year after the so-called morality law’ codified a sweeping set of restrictions on women and girls.

The Gender Alert also looked at the Taliban’s ban on women working for NGOs – announced nearly three years ago. Its impact is devastating.

Full article.

 

News
Region
Partner
UN Women
Focus areas
https://www.unwomen.org/en/news-stories/press-briefing/2025/08/press-briefing-by-un-women-on-the-new-afghanistan-gender-alert

Today, UN Women is releasing new data which shows that, despite this ban, the vast majority of Afghans – women and men alike – support girls’ education.

In a nationwide, door-to-door survey of more than 2,000 Afghans, more than 9 out of 10 said it was important for girls to continue their schooling

Support was overwhelming across the board: from men and women, in both urban and rural communities.

It is clear: Despite the existing bans, the Afghan people want their daughters to exercise their right to education

In a country where half the population lives in poverty, education is the difference between despair and possibility. 

These findings can be found in a new UN Women Gender Alert, spotlighting the normalization of the women’s rights crisis in Afghanistan, four years after the Taliban takeover. The Gender Alert comes one year after the so-called morality law’ codified a sweeping set of restrictions on women and girls.

The Gender Alert also looked at the Taliban’s ban on women working for NGOs – announced nearly three years ago. Its impact is devastating.

Full article.

 

News
Region
Partner
UN Women
Focus areas