Women to cover themselves and not go outside unnecessarily; Taliban rule

Women to cover themselves and not go outside unnecessarily; Taliban rule

Synopsis

Taliban rulers requested all Afghan ladies on Saturday to wear head-to-toe clothing openly.

Women to cover themselves and not go outside unnecessarily; Taliban rule
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Women to cover themselves and not go outside unnecessarily; Taliban rule

Taliban rulers requested all Afghan ladies on Saturday to wear head-to-toe clothing openly.

The announcement prescribes ladies wear the head-to-toe burqa, with ladies just showing their eyes.

“We need our sisters to live with pride and wellbeing,” Khalid Hanafi, the acting clergyman for the Taliban’s bad habit and prudence service, purportedly said.

“For all honorable Afghan ladies wearing Hijab is fundamental and the best Hijab is chadori (the head-to-toe burqa) which is essential for our practice and is aware,” said Shir Mohammad, an authority from the bad habit and ethicalness service.

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That’s what the declaration added assuming ladies had no significant work outside it is better for them to remain at home.

“Islamic standards and Islamic philosophy are more essential to us than whatever else,” Hanafi added.

On the off chance that a lady doesn’t follow the standard, her dad or nearest male relative would be visited, as per Reuters, and face potential prison time or terminating from state occupations.

In April, the Taliban prohibited ladies from traveling solo – an order that has been unobtrusively disregarded.

Also, while tuition based schools and colleges in Kabul keep on working, young ladies have been prohibited from school past 6th grade in the greater part of the country.

Taliban hard-liners are returning to the past in the nation, permitting people to just visit recreational areas on isolated days and denying the utilization of cellphones in colleges.

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During the Taliban’s past rule, somewhere in the range of 1996 and 2001, there were comparable limitations on ladies. They were expelled by a U.S.- drove alliance for holding onto al Qaeda pioneer Osama container Laden.

They got back to control following America’s takeoff in the late spring of a year ago.

In April, the U.S. Division of Defense found that generally $7 billion worth of military gear moved to Afghanistan security powers stayed there during the Taliban takeover.

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