Qatar’s top diplomat said the Taliban steps on the education of girls in Afghanistan “was very disappointing” and “step backward”, and asked for group leadership to see Doha for how to run the Islamic system.
Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani refers to, among others, the Taliban rejection to allow Afghan women’s secondary school students to continue their studies, weeks after the group took power.He spoke at a news conference on Thursday with European Union Foreign Policy Chief Josep Borrell in Doha.
“ The recent address that we’ve seen unfortunately in Afghanistan, it has been really disappointing to see some course being taken backwards, ” he said. Doha has run a pivotal broker in Afghanistan following last month ’s recession of US forces, helping to vacate thousands of outsiders and Afghans, engaging the new Taliban potentates and supporting operations at Kabul airfield.
“ We need to keep engaging them and nudging them not to take like conduct, and we’ve also been trying to demonstrate for the Taliban how Muslim countries can conduct their laws, how they can deal with the women ’s issues, ” said Sheikh Mohammed.
“ One of the representatives is the State of Qatar, which is a Muslim country; our system is an Islamic system (but but) we’ve women outnumbering men in workforces, in government and in late education. ”
has been incriminated of natural rights abuses in recent weeks, including intimately threading up the bodies of four professed kidnappers from cranes in Herat last week.
The display of the dead snatch suspects, who were killed in a shootout, was the most high- profile public wrath since the Taliban swept to power last month.
It has been seen as a sign the Taliban will takeon fearsome measures suchlike to their prior rule from 1996 to 2001.
The Taliban follows an extremely strict interpretation of Islamic law that segregates men and women, and have also slashed women ’s access to work.
It has been fair two weeks since girls were obviated from going to secondary academy, and segregated rallies led by women have broken out across Afghanistan in recent days.