RASC News Agency: A number of Afghanistani citizens and women’s rights activists living in Toronto, Canada, by launching a protest on August 13, condemned the increasing restrictions of the Taliban group on Afghanistani women.
These protests were launched on the eve of the two-year rule of the Taliban group over the country, and the protesters said that leaving the fate of 30 million Afghanistani citizens in the hands of this group is a global shame.
In their protest, in a resolution, they demanded the cancellation of the Doha agreement between the United States and the Taliban group.
In one of their resolutions, it is stated: “Two years have passed since Afghanistan fell or was handed over to the extremist and misogynistic group of the Taliban.
In the last two years, this group has continuously committed atrocities and horrible crimes against the people of Afghanistan, especially women, and turned Afghanistan into a country in the world. Women are deprived of all their constitutional and civil rights.”
Protesters called 65% of the orders of the leader of the Taliban group against Afghanistani women and applied them as anti-human.
In a resolution of Afghanistani citizens and female activists living in Canada, hundreds of Afghanistani citizens, including women and children, have left this country to save their lives after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan and are displaced in neighboring countries.
According to this resolution, the Taliban group’s claim of providing security is far from reality and people are killed by this group and other groups every day.
These protesters asked the international community and human rights institutions not to use double methods in dealing with terrorist groups and to refrain from recognizing the Taliban group and to work for the creation of an inclusive government in which the rights of all are respected.
These marches are launched in different parts of the world while women and girls have been deprived of their most basic rights after nearly two years of the Taliban group’s control over Afghanistan.