Afghanistani Women's Rights Violations

852 Words2 Pages

Many women from around the world experience discrimination, inequality, and injustice because they are a female, a gender considered to be inferior by many, like the Taliban (Hess, 2014). Although, some women just witness and experience inequality, many women in third world countries are treated inhumanely, as well as, being denied the most basic rights. Afghani women under the regime of the Taliban experienced the most atrocious conditions set for women in the history of Afghanistan. Afghani women suffer dire laws that deprive them of their freedom and are subjected to punishment if not followed. As history progressed, women's rights in Afghanistan dwindled; the Taliban instituted many restrictions for the rights constituted for women and …show more content…

The Taliban gained control by overthrowing city by city until they reached the capitol and gradually become the most dominant group. All the rules set by the Taliban obeyed their interpretation of the Islamic laws. These laws were extremely restrictive; for example, the laws prohibited many modern forms of entertainment, as well as impose personal restrictions on dressing and grooming (Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia 2014). The Taliban strictly adhered to their laws and would impose radical punishments to anyone who did not follow them. The Taliban most prominently affected the females because it stated that, "the face of a woman is a source of corruption for men not related to them” (Gohari, 2000). The Taliban believed that if they remove the women from public’s eye, Afghanistan will be a much better place to live …show more content…

Aisha was sought out and dragged to a mountainside to be brutally tortured and punished for running away from her spouse. Ignoring Aisha’s protests, her brother in law held her down while her husband “sliced off her ears. Then he started on her nose” (Baker, 2010). Aisha passed out from the pain and was left there by them on the mountainside. Upon the judge hearing her story, the judge was unmoved and used her incident as an example to scare the other girls in the village. Her incident scarred her for the rest of her and her family’s life. The Taliban denied the right for any women to flee from her husband. The Taliban’s control over the government portrayed the relentless measures that they took in order to maintain power and show their dominance among the people. Aisha was only one victim out of thousands that were scarred by the

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