RASC: UN Women in Afghanistan says it is more affected by the ban on women work than other UN offices in Afghanistan, but refuses to work with all-male teams.
This organization has published a statement today, Monday, May 22, saying that the UN mission has not been challenged or affected anywhere in the world, except Afghanistan.
The United Nations Women’s Division, known as UN Women, has called the ban on women working for the offices of this organization the latest violation of women’s rights and said that this ban “violates the values we believe in and the international community is based on.” »
According to this institution, the recent ban of the Taliban group is the peak of the rulings and behaviors that aim to systematically remove Afghan women and girls from social life.
The UN Women’s Department has added that 70% of the staff of this department and 5% of the staff of all UN offices are women.
UN Women’s statement reads: “UN Women is uniquely affected by these restrictions that target women. However, we will not work with men’s teams. “We will not give up our principled approach in working with women, for women.”
The agency added that it will do everything to ensure that aid delivery impacts the lives of women and girls.
The UN Women’s Department recently said: “The struggle for women’s rights in Afghanistan is not only about the rights of Afghan women and girls.
“This is a fight for the rights of every single woman around the world who has been oppressed or silenced simply because she is a woman.”
After the rule of the Taliban group, women and girls have been deprived of their basic rights.
Currently, girls and women are not allowed to study and work.
Although the Taliban group has repeatedly said that these bans are temporary, it is not clear when they remove these prohibitions.
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