Inter-agency mission to Afghanistan reports positive signs concerning women's rights-Xinhua

Inter-agency mission to Afghanistan reports positive signs concerning women's rights

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2023-01-31 05:35:45

UNITED NATIONS, Jan. 30 (Xinhua) -- A mission of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee to Afghanistan has reported positive signs concerning women's rights in the country.

The mission was sent to Afghanistan last week to look into the effects of the ban on women being employed in national and local and international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and humanitarian work that was promulgated by the Taliban on Dec. 24, 2022.

Days after the Dec. 24 edict, the Afghanistan minister of public health said this edict would not apply in the health sector. That was followed a few days later by a similar exception in the education sector. So there already was a record of exceptions, said UN Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Martin Griffiths, who chairs the committee and led the mission to Afghanistan.

"And in addition to making clear our grave concern about the edict itself, we then also said, okay, if you're not rescinding the edict now, then we must expand these exceptions to cover all the aspects of humanitarian action. And that was the agenda with which we met all those de facto Taliban leaders," Griffiths told a press briefing on Monday.

He said the mission spent several days in Kabul and met with nine Taliban leaders, including the de facto acting foreign minister, the de facto acting economy minister, the first and the second deputy prime ministers, and the interior minister.

"So we expressed our opposition to the ban, hope for it to be rescinded, and in the meantime asked for further sectors to be granted these exceptions or authorizations for the role and the function of women," said Griffiths. "In all these meetings, we were told that indeed, these such arrangements would be forthcoming ... we were asked to be patient."

The mission was told that guidelines are being developed by the Taliban authorities, which would provide allegedly the role of functioning of women in humanitarian operations, he said.

"Let's see if these guidelines do come through," said Griffiths, adding that "our view is that the message has clearly been delivered that women are central, essential workers in the humanitarian sector, in addition to having rights, and we need to see them back to work."

The Inter-Agency Standing Committee is a humanitarian coordination forum of the UN system. It brings together the executive heads of 18 organizations and consortia, with members from within and outside the United Nations, to formulate policy, set strategic priorities and mobilize resources in response to humanitarian crises.