International Organisations Call On Taliban To Reopen Schools For Girls

International officials and organisations have renewed calls for equal access to education in Afghanistan as the new school year begins, with a focus on girls’ rights.

International officials and organisations have renewed calls for equal access to education in Afghanistan as the new school year begins, with a focus on girls’ rights.
UNICEF’s regional director for South Asia, Sanjay Wijesekera, said on Thursday that the time has come to reopen schools to girls in Afghanistan.
In a post on X, he wrote that Afghan girls have waited too long and that reopening schools should bring hope to all.
He said hope, dignity and the future begin with education.
Tajudeen Oyewale, UNICEF’s representative in Afghanistan, also said on X that every girl in the country has the right to go to school.
He added that when girls are educated, communities become stronger and the future is brighter for everyone.
Richard Lindsay, the UK’s special envoy for Afghanistan, said excluding women and girls from education harms the country’s future and that education must be accessible to all.
The Italian embassy for Afghanistan said it hopes the new school year will bring a time when all girls can return to classrooms.
UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, also said in recent days that the country is once again starting a school year while girls above sixth grade remain barred from education and women are excluded from universities. He called for an end to these restrictions.
The Taliban began the new academic year on Thursday, March 26, without reopening secondary schools for girls.
Afghanistan remains the only country in the world where girls above primary level are not allowed to receive an education.