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Taliban slash govt salaries of Afghan women

Photo: BSS/AFP

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After kicking out the foreign-backed government in 2021, the Taliban government stopped most women employed in the public sector from attending their offices while continuing to pay them.

BSS/AFP

Publisted at 7:51 AM, Tue Jul 9th, 2024

Afghan authorities have slashed the salaries of women government workers who have been forced to stay at home since the Taliban seized power, the finance ministry said yesterday.

After kicking out the foreign-backed government in 2021, the Taliban government stopped most women employed in the public sector from attending their offices while continuing to pay them.

"Women who are at home and do not go to the office... their salaries are 5,000 Afghanis ($70) a month," Ahmad Wali Haqmal, the finance ministry spokesman, told AFP.

Women who are permitted to work in segregated areas such as in government hospitals or schools would continue to get paid a salary according to their position.

Women had previously earned up to around 35,000 Afghanis in the public sector, including university professors forced off campus.

Administrative roles in ministries could pay around 20,000 Afghanis, although this was reduced for many to around 15,000 after the Taliban seized power.

A 25-year-old woman, who asked not to be identified for security reasons and who has worked for the Information and Culture department outside Kabul since early 2021, said her salary has dropped from 10,000 Afghanis.

"Making women stay at home is already a very big problem for us -- we are in a very bad mental and psychological condition -- and now that our salaries have decreased, this has only worsened," she told AFP.

She uses her salary to support the seven members of her family, including her sick mother, but said it would barely last her two weeks.

The salary change came into effect in July and is estimated to affect tens of thousands of women who work in the public sector, the finance ministry spokesman said.

Since returning to power in 2021, Taliban authorities have curtailed the freedoms of women based on a strict interpretation of Islamic law, which the United Nations has labelled "gender apartheid".

Women have been pushed out of public life, including bans on education, as well as visiting public parks, gyms and baths.

Afghanistan has been battered by decades of war, long propped up by international aid that has been dramatically reduced since the Taliban took back power.

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