By Biodun Busari
The United Nations officials will meet the Taliban authorities in Kabul on Wednesday to seek clarity on a ban that disallows its female staff from working in eastern Afghanistan.
A spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, Stephane Dujarric said, “Our colleagues on the ground at the UN mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) received word of an order by the de facto authorities that bans female national staff members of the UN from working.”
“We are still looking into how this development would affect our operations in the country,” he said, according to a transcript of his news briefing released by the UN on Tuesday, according to Anadolu Agency
“We expect to have more meetings with the de facto authorities tomorrow (Wednesday) in Kabul…we are trying to seek some clarity,” he added.
Earlier, UNAMA condemned the prohibition and said it cannot operate without its female staff.
“We remind de facto authorities that United Nations entities cannot operate and deliver life-saving assistance without female staff,” UNAMA said on Twitter.
UN Chief Antonio Guterres also condemned the latest move against the female UN staff and said it will impact the ability of the UN to help people in Afghanistan.
“I strongly condemn the prohibition of our Afghan female colleagues from working in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province. If this measure is not reversed, it will inevitably undermine our ability to deliver life-saving aid to the people who need it,” Guterres wrote on Twitter.
The Taliban administration is yet to share any detail about the local authorities’ action in Nangarhar province, bordering Pakistan.
However, the latest development emerged just less than three months after three international aid agencies, including CARE, Save the Children, and International Rescue Committee (IRC), announced in January to partially resume their activities in Afghanistan.
The announcement happened after the Taliban administration’s promise to allow female workers to carry out their work, Anadolu Agency said.
These agencies suspended their operations in December last year after the Taliban banned women from working in local and international aid organisations.
The Taliban’s return to power, followed by the disruption of international financial assistance, has left the war-torn country in economic, humanitarian and human rights crises.
Women and girls have been denied of their rights, including the right to education, and they have disappeared from public life.
Thousands of women have since lost their jobs or were forced to resign from government institutions and the private sector.
Girls have been prevented from attending middle and high schools.
Many women have demanded that their rights be reinstated by taking to the streets, protesting and organising campaigns.
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