The laws that prevent women reporting effectively are impacted by the intersection of being female and of being a journalist. The Taliban issued decrees that women are not allowed to travel alone, that TV presenters and guests must cover their faces, and in some provinces that their voices cannot be heard on the radio. Travelling to meet sources suddenly becomes impossible, while radio presenters and other female voices are silenced in places like Kandahar, where women have been told they cannot phone into radio stations.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    This looks bad for afghan people, but I don’t see how it could change unless afghan people demand change.

    There’s been intense outside pressure, a war/occupation, sanctions, and after many decades Talibans are still in power with their extreme patriarchy.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      31 year ago

      … how it could change unless afghan people demand change.

      As much as I agree, we are probably not remotely able to fully understand the humanitarian situation the people of Afghanistan are facing every day.

      Almost 20 million people – half the population – are suffering either level-3 “crisis” or level-4 “emergency” levels of food insecurity under the assessment system of the World Food Programme (WFP). […] tens of thousands of people in one province, Ghor, had slipped into “catastrophic” level-5 acute malnutrition, a precursor to famine. The WFP has stated that Afghanistan “continues facing the highest prevalence of insufficient food consumption globally.”

      And the situation for women and girls is even worse, they are much more effected.