Afghanistan's minister of vice and virtue has announced a "bizarre new restriction" banning women from speaking to each other, said The Daily Telegraph. "Even when an adult female prays and another female passes by, she must not pray loudly enough for them to hear," said the minister Khalid Hanafi in an audio clip released on Monday.
What did the commentators say? Human rights activists have warned it could mean women are "effectively banned from holding conversations with one another," said The Telegraph, although Hanafi's "rambling" voice recording left exact details unclear. The Taliban is "waging an all-out war against us, and we have no one in the world to hear our voices," a former civil servant in Kabul said to the outlet. Now, "we cannot even hear each other's voices."
The ban on women praying together joins a list of restrictions on women's speech passed in August, when Afghanistan's ruling regime banned women from speaking in public or loudly inside their homes to prevent their voices from being heard by men. "The mere sound of a woman's voice outside the home is apparently considered a moral violation," Roza Otunbayeva, the head of the U.N. assistance mission in Afghanistan, said to France's TV5 Monde.
Even if the Taliban's behavioral edicts are difficult to enforce in practice, "people start self-regulating," said Yogita Limaye, a BBC correspondent in Afghanistan. "We even avoid speaking among ourselves, thinking that if someone from the Taliban hears us they could stop and question us," one girl said to the broadcaster. "If we can't speak, why even live? We are like dead bodies moving around."
What next? The U.N. called for the Taliban to repeal the "egregious" laws, which are an attempt to turn women into "faceless, voiceless shadows." In response, the Taliban said it would no longer cooperate with the U.N. As a result, relations appear to have "hit a significant roadblock," said Limaye. Meanwhile, Afghan women are "showing their dissent by posting videos of themselves online, their faces covered, singing songs about freedom."
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