The Taliban’s restrictions on female education have seen universities around the world announce scholarship opportunities for Afghan women and girls, enabling hundreds to relocate to neighbouring or nearby countries, as well as campuses further afield.
Afghan Witness’s (AW) conversations with female Afghan students this year reveal that gaining these opportunities – or even leaving the country in the first place – is not so simple, however. They face both economic and language barriers, as well as the Taliban’s restrictions on women’s freedom of movement and travel.
Barred from language classes
Since the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021, girls’ secondary schools have remained closed in most parts of the country. Female students continued to attend gender-segregated university classes until December 2022, when the Taliban announced that women would no longer be able to attend university.
Before the university ban, some girls had continued to pursue education by taking language classes at universities and education centres, but when universities were closed in late December, AW heard from several students that they were barred from these classes, too.
Desperate to apply for scholarships outside the country, a student we’re calling Azadah* had been focusing on improving her English and Arabic since the Taliban’s return.
“When we heard about the ban on female education – we did not believe it and still went to our language course at the university,” says Azadah, adding that male students were allowed to take their exams that day, while females had to leave.
“This was very heart-breaking – seeing girls coming out of the university with their eyes full of tears,” she adds.