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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

The Taliban Are At It Again...

44 replies

FrothyDragon · 24/10/2012 22:22

Hinna Khan, 17, has been threatened by the Taliban

Surprise, surprise, another girl has become a target for daring to campaign for women's rights. :(

OP posts:
kim147 · 25/10/2012 21:12

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

scarevola · 25/10/2012 22:02

The boys don't get education either, in the areas where the Taliban rule. The religious aspect is almost incidental really, this is a cross-border Pashtun movement allied which murders other Muslims as well as adherents of other religions.

The to-ing and fro-ing over the Swat Valley has been pretty well documented, and the levels of education there are higher than those in the areas where the Talibs are more entrenched.

namechangeguy · 25/10/2012 22:20

If you are religious zealots who want to rule by fear and intimidation, the last thing you need is an educated population.

Trekkie · 25/10/2012 23:17

My DH told me that before the taleban, women in Afghanistan were educated and held roles across society and in all sorts of occupations / professions.

As far as I understand it, this did not assist them when their rights were removed when the taleban came in?

I am not sure that women are able to fight, whether they are educated or not, against that type of change. I am not sure any oppressed group will have much luck when the ruling powers and much of society turns against them.

scarevola · 26/10/2012 10:51

The position of women in Afghanistan has varied over the decades, and also sharply between cities and rural regions.

Is your DH an expert on the region? If so, I would be interested in references he thinks particularly germane.

Xenia · 26/10/2012 11:15

Tr, that's true. Some afghanwomen were doing very well. It's a bit like Iran where I have been on business a few times - it was quite sophisticated with well educated women and then went backwards once the Shah went.

When you let the poor if they are fundamentalist sexist and old fashioned into power that tends not to be good for women. Look at how few women in Communist China are part of the new leadership proposals.

scarevola · 26/10/2012 12:47

Iran may have veiled its women, but retained, even under theocracy full participation in education to the highest levels and including such appointments as science minister: wiki, but a useful list. It is only now, after 10 years during which numbers of women in higher education has been greater than that of men, has there been a move to reduce female numbers with stated aim of bringing it line with proportion of population.

namechangeguy · 26/10/2012 14:30

Scarevola - that is a hugely surprising list, given the propaganda we are fed about the Iranian regime. Thank you for posting it. Are you Iranian? How much do you know about the country? It's a fascinating place.

scarevola · 26/10/2012 14:34

No, I'm not Iranian, nor do I have particularly strong associations, though I have had some connexions in the course of work (a few years ago now, though). What about you?

Xenia · 26/10/2012 15:13

Yes, I know that about Iran. They are well educated but still forced to wear a load of cloth over themselves. They have never been arab. They are aryan I think genetically and always pretty advanced which makes it even sadder that they have gone backwards to much in terms of imposition of religious and clothing rules which are so ridiculous.

Xenia · 26/10/2012 15:14

..and their human rights record is as bad as the Taliban or China or North Korea now. Terrible.

namechangeguy · 26/10/2012 15:52

Nope, not Iranian - white trash British Grin. I just have an interest in what appears to be such a contradictory nation. I know that they are a people proud of their history and tradition, and like many nations in that area they were once at the forefront of scientific and cultural thinking. It is sad to see such countries regress into theocratically dominated pariah states.

Xenia · 26/10/2012 20:27

They were certainly very keen to tell me they feel misrepresented in the press when I was working out there and a third of the 120 professionals to whom I was talking at one point were female. They have certainly got themselves into a huge mess and now I think almost have the highest inflation on the planet which must be devastating for people.

Vege · 31/10/2012 13:03

Where does this "information" come from..the BBC? LOL X

scarevola · 31/10/2012 14:53

Information about the level of female education in Iran is widely reported, as are the latest moves to reduce participation in some places so that (under-represented) male students can secure places.

But it's all a bit beside the point if this thread is going to attract posters who want to discuss the Taliban (as one might except from the thread title) - a Sunni Pashtun movement in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

sashh · 01/11/2012 07:41

Iran is interesting in so may ways.

When the Shah was 'modernising' Iran women who wore a veil in public had it ripped off.

After the revoloution the number of women in higher education went through the roof. Many parents did not want their daughters wearing in western clothes and mixing with men at university.

Adding a veil and single sex classes actually opened up education for women in Iran.

MrsSnaplegs · 01/11/2012 07:46

I am reading "the sewing circles of Herat" written by Christine lamb - very interesting seeing her views on the differences the Taliban made - for the worse - to women and the underground movements that occurred to try and continue their education
It's a decade old now but worth a readSmile

SolidGoldYESBROKEMYSPACEBAR · 02/11/2012 01:45

It's interesting that the Yanks are so keen on bombing the Taliban and yet they are busy building their own woman-hating theocracy at home.

Pilgit · 03/11/2012 09:45

All down history there are examples of sacrifices being made for the sake of peace (invariably I don't agree btw) and frequently womens rights are a sacrifice that governments make for the sake of peace. we have seen this in Iraq and Afghanistan and it looks to be happening again in Pakistan. This just makes me angry as it is not peace for the women of those nations. These are not the only examples and it is not always women on the receiving end (the fact that Poland got well and truly shafted by Churchill and the americans at the end of WW2 - they fought with the british for a free Poland and they got communism from Russia as a result instead.)

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