US withdrawal from Afghanistan: Afghan women in trouble (Part 2)

It seems that Afghan women nearing difficult days after US President Joe Biden's decision to withdraw completely from Afghanistan by September 11, as Afghan women have not yet achieved all their goals.
As soon as the US administration announced the withdrawal
from Afghanistan, fears escalated that Afghan women would return to being
persecuted after they had made great strides towards the future over the past
few years. Despite the disadvantages of the American occupation, it preserved
the freedom of Afghan women. Before that, Afghan women were not safe walking on
the street because they would have been flogged or beaten. Afghan MP Fawzia
Kofi, who was previously exposed to an assassination attempt, has warned that
this will occur again after the American withdrawal, as they will be forced to
deal with “people who do not believe in the existence of women.” She warned
that progress may evaporate, as the Taliban consider women second-class
citizens.
It is noteworthy that the Taliban had imprisoned Fawzia
Kofi’s husband during their five-year rule, and she was threatened with stoning
because she put on nail polish.
Among the main concerns that dominate Afghan women are the
closure of girls' schools, the reduction of career options for women, and the
increase in gender-based violence.
According to the New York Times, over the past twenty years,
despite unequal progress, Afghan women joined the army and police forces and
held political positions, while some even became pop music stars and others
competed in Olympic and robot teams, and so on. As US and NATO forces prepare
to withdraw from Afghanistan, Afghan women fear a new era of Taliban rule.
The Taliban took power in Afghanistan prior to the US
invasion in 2001. During this era, women experienced woes as the Taliban turned
them into prisoners according to a wrong interpretation of Islamic law. With
the fall of Taliban rule, women’s lives in the country changed, especially in urban
areas such as Kabul.
Following the US invasion, the situation for women in
Afghanistan began to improve, as girls had previously been prevented under
Taliban rule from going to school and going to work.
Reports from the World Bank say 36% of girls go to school,
although many do not complete secondary education, and 52% of women marry at
the age of 20.
The illiteracy rate is still high among girls. According to
the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), only 22.2% of women between the
ages of 15 and 24 can read and write.
Despite the achievements made by Afghan women, they still
face many problems and obstacles, which increases their fear of the Taliban’s
return to power. Perhaps what happened with Afghan actress Hasiba Ebrahimi is
the best proof of that. It is enough to know that the word “actress” in
Afghanistan is one of the colloquial synonyms for the word “prostitute”, and
Ebrahimi was subjected to insults in the street and through social media. Even
her family did not accept her work easily due to the closed view of society,
and she was also exposed to many threats and harassment by passers-by.
A prominent Afghan actress and women's rights activist, Saba
Sahar, 46, was injured after an assassination attempt in Kabul, which also
injured her driver and bodyguard.
Even Afghan MP Rehana Azad did not escape the bullying of
society, despite winning the most votes in her province in central Afghanistan,
just because she was divorced. A fellow parliamentarian even described her as a
prostitute and a spy, saying that she violated the teachings of Islam by
divorcing.