Women's Rights In Afghanistan

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Once the Taliban lost control of Afghan rule, women's rights began to change for the better. Now that the Taliban rule is gone, global organizations and Afghan women are working to make Afghanistan a more equal place. Losing control after 9/11 in 2001, different groups of people are making efforts to help Women’s rights. Since the rise of the Taliban, the Feminist Majority Foundation (FMF) has taken on many tasks and objective to improve life of women. The FMF has a plan to, “Intensify its nationwide public education campaign for Afghan women and girls to win the full and permanent restoration of women’s rights, promote the leadership of women in the planning and governing of post-Taliban Afghanistan, increase and monitor the provision of emergency …show more content…

Using many different protesting tactics, women are taking great risks to demonstrate their desire for change. Starting off with a smaller desire of change, “Afghan women are aware of their rights, they fight for them in their family” (Griswold). With this change made in their own houses, women are beginning to get the family rights they deserve. With this push to make a change, women have been motivated to take more actions to stand up for themselves. On the other end of the spectrum, some women are using physical fighting and protest to gain a bigger role in society. Women are beginning to storm the city and fight for their rights. In Kunduz, an Afghan city, “About 300 Afghan women walked the streets of the Capital to demand that parliament repeal a new law that introduces a range of Taliban - like restrictions on women, and permits, among other things, marital rape” (Filkins). [Add closing]. On another level of protest, Afghan women seeked out a literary protest to make a change and get women involved. Sahira Sharif is the Mirman Baheer founder, a poetry foundation which encourages women to write about and stand up for their rights. Supporting women to write what they feel, Sharif believes that “A poem is a sword,” (Griswold) and that “Literature is a more effective battle for women’s rights than shouting at political rallies” …show more content…

should work with Human Rights and Feminist organizations to increase equality for these women. With a strong connection to Afghanistan, the FMF has created different plans and campaigns that use world wide countries help to increase life of women. [ADD CONTEXT HERE] During the height of Taliban rule in 1997, “The Feminist Majority launched the Campaign to Stop Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan to urge the US government and the U.N. to do everything in their power to restore the human rights of Afghan women and girls” (Campaign Objectives). The FMF looked to the U.S. for human rights support to help women's rights, and the U.S. sent in human rights officials to give ideas and help make a change. Even Though this was a great start to a change, sending in more officials and increasing public awareness on the topic of women’s rights will be very valuable to the women in Afghanistan. In addition to U.S. involvement, Afghanistan organizations and the FMF have also reached out to other countries, such as England, to help their rights campaigns. The UK Prime minister Tony Blair states, “the conflict will not be the end. We will not walk away, as the outside world has done so many times before” (Women in Afghanistan), to prove that there will be outside involvement from Britain to help aid the women in Afghanistan. If America continues to stay close and aid Afghanistan, then women’s rights in greatly

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