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Afghanistan: women stage protest urging Taliban to allow girls in school
- During the Taliban’s first stint in power two decades ago, women and girls were mostly denied education and employment
- The women protesters said they were willing to wear a full head covering, or burka, if their daughters could still go to school
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Defiant Afghan women on Thursday held a rare protest saying they were willing to accept the burka if their daughters could still go to school under Taliban rule.
“It is our right to have education, work and security,” the group of around 50 female demonstrators chanted, waving placards on the streets of Afghanistan’s western city of Herat.
During the Taliban’s first stint in power, before being ousted by a US-led invasion in 2001, women and girls were mostly denied education and employment.
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Burkas became mandatory in public, women could not leave home without a male companion, and street protests were unthinkable.
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“We are here to ask for our rights,” said Fereshta Taheri, one of the demonstrators, by phone.
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