Afghan authorities are closing educational centers and institutions supported by non-governmental groups in the south until further notice, officials said on Monday. The centers are mainly for girls who are not allowed to go to school after the sixth grade.
The Ministry of Education has ordered the provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, located in the heart of the Taliban, to close educational centers and institutes while the committee checks their activities. He did not provide an explanation for the closure, and a ministry spokesman was not immediately available for comment.
Mutawakil Ahmad, a spokesman for the Kandahar Department of Education, confirmed that educational centers have been suspended until further notice. “The decision was made after people complained,” Ahmad said, without elaborating.
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Despite initial promises of more moderate rule than during their previous tenure in the 1990s, the Taliban have been cracking down since taking over the country in 2021, with US and NATO forces withdrawing from Afghanistan after two decades of war.
The ban on women’s education extends to universities. Women are denied access to public places, including parks, and most forms of employment. Last year, Afghan women were banned from working for national and local NGOs, allegedly because they did not properly wear the hijab or the Islamic hijab and did not comply with the requirement of gender segregation. This order also includes the United Nations.
The Taliban are closing educational centers and non-governmental institutions in southern Afghanistan. (AP photo)
At least two NGO representatives knew in Helm and confirmed the information about the order of the Ministry of Education. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
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One said that the NGO operates in nine districts, offering about 650 classes with 20-30 students in each class. According to him, the classes are attended by girls and boys, but mostly by girls, as they cannot go to school.
Most of the projects are implemented by UNICEF, the United Nations children’s organization, with local NGOs working as subcontractors or project implementers. Female teachers and male teachers work in separate classes.
Ministry officials control all their activities, the official added.
No one from UNICEF in Afghanistan was immediately available for comment.
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A representative of the education department in Kandahar said that many NGOs are active in the field of education and provide education for girls. But he said they needed to be reviewed as there is no accountability for their spending and there are fears of corruption and suspicions that the centers and institutes are ghost schools. The official, the district director of education, spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
It was not clear how many centers and institutes were closed or how many students were affected in the two provinces because of the order.