Taliban once again close girl's schools, sparking protests
Afghan school girls attend the first day of the academic year at their school after the educational institutes opened in Kandahar, Afghanistan, Sept. 7, 2022. While schools for female students in grades seven through 12 are still closed nationwide, the school year began in Afghanistan's warmer climatic regions. This has led to calls for the government to restore schools for female students past the sixth grade. (EPA Photo)


The Taliban once again backtracked on a promise to open secondary schools for girls, closing them in an eastern Afghan city just days after they reopened for classes. The move sparked backlash and protests by students and locals on Saturday, an activist and residents said.

Last week, five government secondary schools in the eastern province of Paktia restarted classes after hundreds of girls and tribal leaders demanded they reopen.

But when students in provincial capital Gardez went for classes on Saturday, they were told to return home, a women's rights activist and residents said.

"This morning when they did not allow the girls to enter schools, we held a protest," said activist Yasmin, an organizer of the rally.

Dressed in their school uniforms – a white headscarf and black shalwar kameez – the girls marched through the center of Gardez to protest the closure.

Four of the newly reopened schools are in Gardez and one in Samkani.

The Taliban have imposed harsh restrictions on girls and women to comply with their austere vision of Islam since returning to power in August last year – effectively squeezing them out of public life.

Afghan girls attend class at the Tajrobawai Girls High School in Herat, Afghanistan, Nov. 25, 2021. Taliban authorities on Sept. 10, 2022, shut down girl's schools above the sixth grade in eastern Afghanistan's Paktia province that had been briefly opened after a recommendation by tribal elders and school principals, according to witnesses and social media posts. (AP Photo)

In March, they shuttered all girls' secondary schools hours after reopening them for the first time under their rule.

Images posted on social media Saturday showed the girls marching through the city center as residents and shopkeepers watched.

"The Taliban did not allow anyone to take footage of the protest. In fact, they broke some protesters' mobile phones," Yasmin told Agence France-Presse (AFP) by telephone.

Two residents from the city also confirmed the protest, which journalists were not allowed to cover.

"The students protested peacefully, but soon the rally was dispersed by security forces," one Gardez resident who asked not to be named told AFP.

Officials maintain the ban is just a "technical issue" and classes will resume once a curriculum based on Islamic rules is defined.

A few public schools continue to operate in parts of the country following pressure from local leaders and families.

They remain shut in most provinces, however, including the capital Kabul as well as Kandahar, the de facto power center of the Taliban.

Around 3 million girls are currently banned from getting secondary education in Afghanistan, according to UNICEF.