@ihateexme_:

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Hinata Uzumaki
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Tuesday 17 December 2024 12:28:14 GMT
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amieyrock349
amieyrock349 :
support
2024-12-17 22:13:13
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toppoki247
Toppoki :
Mommyyyy 😘
2024-12-26 17:21:12
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real_bongsu
Real_bongsu :
mommy saya
2024-12-18 01:38:54
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yuuki._to
yuuki._to :
Mommy🥺
2024-12-17 20:41:16
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compett91
compett91 :
cntiknya .🥰..
2025-01-08 23:16:18
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teyohbagel3
virgo :
🥵🥵🥵🥵🥵 ketua
2024-12-17 13:45:21
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M1R4CL3_ :
cantikkk
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Makinn op
2024-12-17 13:12:19
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iszr :
eh🔝
2024-12-17 16:06:04
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arthv.1
محمد امر دنيش :
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2025-05-06 12:39:48
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Along❌kumpaU :
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ahmat basir :
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Lost Nata :
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2024-12-23 18:33:55
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2024-12-18 05:50:53
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2024-12-18 05:10:37
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After the Taliban regained power in August 2021, Afghan women experienced a rapid and severe rollback of their rights. On September 17, 2021, the Taliban banned girls from attending secondary school, effectively cutting off their access to education beyond the age of 12. This was followed by a December 2022 decree that prohibited women from attending universities, completely barring them from higher education. In terms of employment, women were gradually pushed out of most professional roles. By December 2021, the Taliban had prohibited women from working in most government positions and restricted their employment to a few sectors, such as health care, where they were still needed to treat female patients. However, even in these sectors, strict gender segregation was enforced, and women faced numerous obstacles. Women's freedom of movement was drastically curtailed. As of December 2021, they could no longer travel more than 45 miles (72 kilometers) without a male guardian (mahram).  In May 2022, the Taliban introduced a decree mandating that women cover themselves fully in public, including wearing the burqa or hijab that only leaves the eyes visible. Women were also stripped of their legal protections. The Taliban dismantled many of the institutions that had previously supported women’s rights, including the Ministry of Women's Affairs. Practices such as forced marriages and child marriages became more prevalent, with fewer legal safeguards to protect women from such abuses. Afghan women were entirely excluded from the political sphere. No women were appointed to government positions, and their right to participate in public and political life was effectively nullified under the new regime. This comprehensive erosion of rights marked a sharp reversal from the freedoms women had gained over the past two decades in Afghanistan.
After the Taliban regained power in August 2021, Afghan women experienced a rapid and severe rollback of their rights. On September 17, 2021, the Taliban banned girls from attending secondary school, effectively cutting off their access to education beyond the age of 12. This was followed by a December 2022 decree that prohibited women from attending universities, completely barring them from higher education. In terms of employment, women were gradually pushed out of most professional roles. By December 2021, the Taliban had prohibited women from working in most government positions and restricted their employment to a few sectors, such as health care, where they were still needed to treat female patients. However, even in these sectors, strict gender segregation was enforced, and women faced numerous obstacles. Women's freedom of movement was drastically curtailed. As of December 2021, they could no longer travel more than 45 miles (72 kilometers) without a male guardian (mahram). In May 2022, the Taliban introduced a decree mandating that women cover themselves fully in public, including wearing the burqa or hijab that only leaves the eyes visible. Women were also stripped of their legal protections. The Taliban dismantled many of the institutions that had previously supported women’s rights, including the Ministry of Women's Affairs. Practices such as forced marriages and child marriages became more prevalent, with fewer legal safeguards to protect women from such abuses. Afghan women were entirely excluded from the political sphere. No women were appointed to government positions, and their right to participate in public and political life was effectively nullified under the new regime. This comprehensive erosion of rights marked a sharp reversal from the freedoms women had gained over the past two decades in Afghanistan.

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