RASC News

Rudabe Applied Studies Center

  • Home
  • Afghanistan
  • World
  • Arts & Culture
  • History
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Women Studies
  • Videos
  • Photos
  • About
  • English
    • العربية
    • English
    • Français
    • Deutsch
    • پښتو
    • فارسی
    • Русский
    • Español
    • Тоҷикӣ
RASC NewsRASC News
  • Home
  • Afghanistan
  • World
  • Arts & Culture
  • History
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Women Studies
  • Videos
  • Photos
  • About
Follow US
© 2023 RASC. All Rights Reserved.
RASC News > Afghanistan > Launching a Campaign for the Education of Afghanistani Girls by the United Nations
AfghanistanNewsWomen Studies

Launching a Campaign for the Education of Afghanistani Girls by the United Nations

Published 17/08/2023
Launching a Campaign for the Education of Afghanistani Girls by the United Nations
SHARE

RASC News Agency: Samia Farooqi, an engineering student, had to flee Afghanistan to continue her studies two years ago when the Taliban group took over Afghanistan and deprived more than 1.1 million women and girls from school and university.

She, who is 21 years old and now lives in the United States of America, is the face of the campaign launched by the United Nations Global Education Fund on the second anniversary of the Taliban’s resumption of control over Afghanistan.

This campaign with the slogan “Voice of Afghanistani Girls” is a global call to respect the rights of Afghanistani women for education, and a large number of girls and women have been forced to leave their country to continue their education.

After Farooqi left Afghanistan in 2021 along with nine other girls from the “Afghanistani Dreamers” robotics team, they finished school in Qatar.

Now, thanks to the scholarship provided by Qatar, she is starting her second year of engineering at Sacramento State University in California.

“This campaign [campaign] is to once again draw the world’s attention to Afghanistani girls and the issues related to their education,” Samia Farooqi said in a written interview with AFP.

She added: “Afghaisnistan seems to have been forgotten.”

Meanwhile, the UN report last month stated that the situation of women and girls in Afghanistan is the worst in the world.

The report said that the policies of the Taliban group can be considered “gender apartheid“.

For Farooqi, such a situation cannot be accepted, she told AFP: “We must ensure that [women and girls] have access to equal opportunities and education, because education is the key to freedom.”

She said in a statement: “Girls are banned from public spaces such as schools, gyms and recreation centers and there is nothing left for them to do, they have to just sit at home.”


Farooqi said: “For the girls of many families, the only way left is marriage; without their consent.” she added that many of her classmates were also forced to marry. “Depression is widespread,” she said in the statement. “The suicide rate of girls has increased a lot in the last two years and this is sad.”

 The “Education Can’t Wait” campaign aims to raise global awareness of the issue through social media next month, giving the voices of Afghanistani girls and women a voice when world leaders gather for the United Nations General Assembly on September 18-19.

EnNews 17/08/2023

Follow Us

Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Instagram Follow
Youtube Subscribe
Related Articles
Air Pollution Levels Surge In Kabul Province
AfghanistanNews

Air Pollution Levels Surge In Kabul Province

07/12/2023
Taliban Force the Displacement of 600 Tajik Families in Ghor
Taliban Detain Local Journalist in Ghazni as Media Repression Deepens Across Afghanistan
Registration of 50 Cases of Dog Bites in Health Centers in the Last Week in Zabul Province
Taliban Detain Two Individuals in Panjshir for Photographing
- ADVERTISEMENT -
Ad imageAd image
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vivamus a odio ex.
English | Français
Deutsch | Español
Русский | Тоҷикӣ
فارسی | پښتو | العربية

© 2023 RASC. All Rights Reserved.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?