Identity Of Instagram Blogger ‘Those Called Celebs’ Revealed.

Identity Of Instagram Blogger 'Those Called Celebs' Revealed

Ghanaian politician Hopeson Adorye reveals the identity of popular blogger Those Called Celebs. The pseudo account holder of the Those Called Celebs page on Instagram must be on every list of Ghanaian celebrities to catch up with as she is known for breaking more fake news than authentic ones in the Ghanaian social media space … Read more

I Did Better Than Nana Addo In Corruption Fight – Mahama

I Did Better Than Nana Addo In Corruption Fight - Mahama

– Ex-President claims he did better than ruling president Nana Addo in the corruption fight. – He said a lot of dubious acts of corruption are going on under the Nana Addo-led administration than his. Former President John Dramani Mahama says the National Democratic Congress (NDC) government, under his leadership, took the corruption fight serious … Read more

Why Do Short Men Marry Tall Women

Why Do Short Men Marry Tall Women

Although some men of average height marry taller women, most shorter males who are eager to marry and start a family will seek females of the same height. This stems from the evolutionary theory that proposes that we as humans naturally strive to be self-interested because this is what will help ensure our survival. Self-interest … Read more

Why Short Women Marry Tall Men

Why Short Women Marry Tall Men

You may be wondering why short women marry tall men if you’ve ever experienced rejection from a woman due to your height. Some research indicates that as many as 80% of short women marry tall men, and the proportions are similar among college-educated women. What do you think is the reason that short women often marry … Read more

How To Hide Apps On Your IPhone.

How To Hide Apps On Your IPhone

Do you know how to protect your work and more private issues by hiding apps on your iPhone apart from using pin codes and passwords? Well, I urge you to stick through this write-up to the end to get informed and educated on how to hide apps on your iPhone.  A simpler way to keep … Read more

Twitter Raise Fund For BECE Candidate Who Studies Under Street Light.

Twitter Raise Fund For BECE Candidate Who Studies Under Street Light

An unnamed young girl who reportedly set to write her Basic Education Certificate Examination ( BECE candidate ) is going viral after photos of her studying under a street  popped up online. A Twitter user by the name Owusu Michael who is believed to have taken photographs of this ‘BECE Candidate’ stated that he has … Read more

What Is The Future Of Women In Afghanistan As Taliban Take Over .

The Taliban’s rapid-fire advance has left women in Afghanistan and girls, a whole generation of whom have grown up with rights and freedoms, among the most vulnerable. Now they stand to lose those hard-won gains as the Taliban seize control of Kabul.

As the Taliban complete their dramatic sweep through Afghanistan, pouring into the capital they were driven out of two decades ago, women in Afghanistan and girls are among the most vulnerable.

Afghan women have been targeted for speaking out against attacks by the Taliban or simply for holding positions of authority.

Since the start of 2021 civilian deaths have risen by almost 50 percent, with more women and children killed and wounded in Afghanistan than in the first six months of any year since records began in 2009, the UN reported in July.

The Afghan government has blamed most targeted killings on the Taliban, who deny carrying out assassinations.

As the Islamist insurgents enter the capital, many fear a disintegration of women’s rights, with the Taliban overturning the freedoms gained during the 20 years since US-led forces helped oversee the country’s transition to democracy.

“The Taliban will regress freedom at all levels and that is what we are fighting against,” an Afghan government spokesperson told Reuters on August 13.

“Women and children are suffering the most and our forces are trying to save democracy. The world should understand and help us.”

Our world collapses

As the capital city falls into the hands of Islamist insurgents, those pleas for help may be too late. Numerous reports have emerged of the Taliban going door-to-door, drafting lists of women and girls aged between 12 and 45 years who are then forced to marry Islamist fighters. Women are being told they cannot leave home without a male escort, can no longer work or study or freely choose the clothes they want to wear. Schools, too, are being closed.

For a whole generation of Afghan women who entered public life – the lawmakers, journalists, local governors, doctors, nurses, teachers, and public administrators – there’s much to lose. While they strove, working alongside male colleagues and in communities unused to seeing women in positions of authority, to help build a democratically-run civil society, they also hoped to open up opportunities for later generations of women to succeed them.

Zahra, 26, is among the many young women who fear their education and ambitions will come to nothing. She watched Thursday evening as the Taliban flooded her hometown of Herat, Afghanistan’s third-largest city, and hoisted their white flags emblazoned with an Islamic declaration of faith.

“I am in big shock,” Zahra, who works for a non-profit organization to raise awareness for women, told AP. “How can it be possible for me as a woman who has worked so hard and tried to learn and advance, to now have to hide and stay at home?”

Zahra stopped going to the office a month ago, as the Taliban neared, and began working remotely from home. But since Thursday she has been unable to work.

Many other educated Afghan women have taken to social media to appeal for help and express their frustration.

“With every city collapsing, human bodies collapse, dreams collapse, history and future collapse, art and culture collapse, life and beauty collapse, our world collapse,” Afghan photographer Rada Akbar wrote on Twitter.

What Is The Future Of Women As Taliban Take Over In Afghanistan

Farkhunda Zahra Naderi, a former lawmaker and senior UN advisor to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and now a member of Afghanistan’s High Council for National Reconciliation has watched as her country opened up over the 20 years to become part of the global community.

“My greatest fear is now they are marginalizing women who have been working in these leadership positions, who have been a strong voice against the most powerful abusers but also working with them to change the situation on the ground,” she said in an interview with Bloomberg. If they eliminate these leaders, she asks, who will be left to speak up for women and defend the gains made over the last 20 years?

What Is The Future Of Women As Taliban Take Over In Afghanistan

Taliban leaders repeatedly made assurances in talks with Western and other leaders, which ultimately failed this month in Doha, that women would continue to have equal rights by Islamic law, including the ability to work and be educated. But in cities overrun by Taliban insurgents, women are already losing their jobs to men.

Women employees at two bank branches, one in Kandahar and the other in the city of Herat, were harassed and castigated by Taliban gunmen in July. The gunmen escorted the women to their homes and told them not to return to their jobs, which would go to male relatives instead.

“It’s really strange to not be allowed to get to work, but now this is what it is,” Noor Khatera, a 43-year-old woman who had worked in the accounts department of the bank told Reuters.

“I taught myself English and even learned how to operate a computer, but now I will have to look for a place where I can just work with more women around.”

Women under Taliban rule

When the fundamentalist group ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001 they imposed Sharia law, a strict interpretation of Islamic law which meant women could not work, girls were banned from attending school and women had to cover their faces in public and always be accompanied by a male relative if they wanted to leave their homes.

Women who broke the rules sometimes suffered humiliation and public beatings by the Taliban’s religious police. The Taliban also carried out public executions, chopped off the hands of thieves, and stoned women accused of adultery.

Life In Taliban Country

So far there have been no reports of such extreme measures in the areas the Taliban have captured. But the many recently reported incidents of the Taliban’s treatment of women and girls to suggest they intend to revert to governing as they once had.

Bleak’ future for students

Victoria Fontan, vice president of the American University of Afghanistan told FRANCE 24 that the situation for Afghan women and girls is very bleak, especially those who are students.

Professor Fontan said some of her female students were holed up in the cities of Kandahar and Herat, which were seized by the Taliban.

“Life is very difficult for them,” she said. “Are they going to be able to continue studying online or not? Telecommunications is going to be quite a key strategy for the Taliban and so for [the students] their only lifeline is the internet, so they’re extremely worried they’re going to be confined to their houses and no longer able to study.”

Marianne O’Grady, deputy country director for Care International in Kabul, is more optimistic. She believes the achievements of women over the past two decades will be difficult to erase, even if the Taliban succeed in their takeover.

“You can’t uneducate millions of people,” she told AP. If women “are back behind walls and not able to go out as much, at least they can now educate their cousins and their neighbors and their children in ways that couldn’t happen 25 years ago”.

Many women, though, are choosing to flee. Nearly 250,000 Afghans have fled their homes since the end of May, 80 percent of them women and children, according to the UN refugee agency.

Ghani on Saturday broke days of silence to address his fellow citizens, saying his main responsibility now was to prevent any more destruction and instability.

But Ghani’s message will ring hollow for Afghan women who are already witnessing reprisals and a reversal of freedoms they once enjoyed.

In the days of Taliban rule, Zarmina Kakar, a 26-year-old women’s rights activist from Kabul, remembered a time when her mother took her out to buy ice cream and was whipped by a Taliban fighter for momentarily exposing her face.

“Today again, I feel that if the Taliban come to power, we will return to the same dark days,” she told AP.

Burna Boy Wins Best International Act At The BETs For The 3rd Time

3 Most Amazing Features Of GBWhatsApp

3 Most Amazing Features Of GBWhatsApp

In this article, I bring you only 3 and its subsidiaries of some most amazing features of GBWhatsApp and l promised to bring up more later. Among other things, these most amazing features of GBWhatsApp are reasons the app is the most patronized knock-off version of the original WhatsApp created by developers who are bent … Read more

Who Are The Taliban In Afghanistan?

Who Are The Taliban In Afghanistan?

The Taliban were removed from power in Afghanistan by US-led forces in 2001, but the group has been on the offensive in recent months and is now on the brink of seizing power again. As the US prepared to complete its withdrawal by 11 September, after two decades of war, the militants took major cities … Read more