Women demand prioritization of human rights at Doha meeting on Afghanistan
A female student remarked, "We urge United Nations representatives to prioritize discussions on women's rights and education at the upcoming.
A female student remarked, "We urge United Nations representatives to prioritize discussions on women's rights and education at the upcoming.
The students, barred from formal education by the Taliban, have turned to this ancient craft to regain a sense of.
Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, expressed the organization’s support for these "courageous trailblazers," including Afghan women
Fariba Ahmad, who used to work in a Kabul salon, earned 15,000 Afghanis a month. Now, she is unemployed.
The funding, the Malala Fund stated, will be allocated to 13 organizations working to keep girls learning and to hold.
Brown expressed deep concern over the irreparable loss of education for Afghan girls.
The Doha meeting, scheduled for the end of this month, will gather envoys from around 15 countries to discuss the.
Taliban's restrictions have stripped many mothers of their basic rights, exacerbating their struggles in a nation scarred by long-term conflicts.
The protestors’ statement precedes a two-day UN-hosted Doha meeting of special envoys from various countries on Afghanistan, scheduled for the.
Afghan women and girls with disabilities, the report adds, continue to face intersecting forms of systematic exclusion.