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Afghanistan

Afghanistan. Why were women denied education. During the rule of the Taliban (1996 – 2001 ), women were forbidden to leave the house without a male escort, to seek medical help from a male doctor and were also banned frm going to school.

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Afghanistan

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  1. Afghanistan

  2. Why were women denied education • During the rule of the Taliban (1996 – 2001), women were forbidden to leave the house without a male escort, to seek medical help from a male doctor and were also banned frm going to school. • Anyone going against the laws of the Taliban would be shot by them. • Afghanistan is one of the worst affected countries by violence against schools, with 670 incidents of attacks on education in 2008. Violence on students have prevented close to 5 million afghan children from attending school in year 2010. In terms of death rates, Afghanistan had 439 teachers, education employees and students killed in 2006-9, one of the highest in the world

  3. Did life improve after Taliban was disposed?

  4. Did life improve after Taliban was disposed? • The Taliban was disposed from Afghanistan in 2001. Yet this article by The Guardian in 2006 states that Taliban insurgents are battling Natotroops and that some 200,000 Afghan children had been forced out of school this year by threats and violence

  5. Did life improve after Taliban was disposed? • Since 2002, the number of girls attending school increased by over 30 percent; however, an estimated 1.5 million school-age girls are still not enrolled in classes. UNICEF reported that 34 percent of children enrolled in school are girls, although this figure hides large disparities from province to province, with enrollment as low as 15 percent in some areas.

  6. Impact on country • Since the Taliban regime was toppled in 2001, up to 6 million girls and boys started attending school. In 2012, the supply of students far exceeded the pool of qualified teachers. •  According to statistics provided by the Ministry of Education, 80 percent of the country’s 165,000 teachers have achieved the equivalent of a high school education or did not complete their post-secondary studies • Only 12% of Afghan women were educated.

  7. How they feel • “It seemed to me like a fairy tale that I would get a job and earn money for my family while supporting women and girls as a whole,” • -Beheshta an Afghan woman who joined the English language class at the ICT Centre to complete her education

  8. Sources • Life as an afghan woman. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.trustineducation.org/resources/life-as-an-afghan-woman/ • Education in aghanistan. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Afghanistan • In afghanistan, women and girls strive to get an education. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.unwomen.org/lo/news/stories/2013/7/afghani-women-strive-to-get-an-education

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