Essayer OR - Gratuit
Alive, but unable to thrive under absolute patriarchy
The Guardian Weekly
|November 22, 2024
Since the Taliban returned to power, women and girls have tried defiance, but despair at their harshly restricted lives
Earlier this year, I spent 10 weeks travelling with the photographer Kiana Hayeri across seven provinces of Afghanistan, speaking to more than 100 Afghan women and girls about how their lives had changed since the Taliban swept back to power.
Hayeri and I both lived in Afghanistan for years, and remained here after the Taliban took control in August 2021.
In the past few years, we have seen women's rights and freedoms, already curtailed, swept away as Taliban edicts have fallen like hammer blows.
Afghan women have been banned from schools, universities, most workplaces even parks and bathhouses.
From Kandahar, the political headquarters of the Taliban, the group's leaders have dictated that women must cover their faces in public, always be accompanied by a man and never let their voices be heard in public.As foreign women, we still carried the rare privilege of freedom of movement, which has nearly disappeared for the 14 million Afghan women and girls across the country. Meeting women while ensuring their security was a daily challenge.
Each province we travelled to revealed different shades of oppression. In some areas in the south and east in particular - women were already living under very restricted conditions before the Taliban's official return, with many saying that now, at least, there was no more violence.
For many, the Taliban's refusal to allow girls to attend secondary education has been the hardest blow. We met Gulsom, 17, who survived a suicide attack on her school a few months before the Taliban came back into power. Severely wounded, she must now use a wheelchair and had to continue her studies at an underground school.

Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition November 22, 2024 de The Guardian Weekly.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
Trump has shown there aren't any rules. We'll all regret that
I never thought it possible that you could look back on the Iraq war and feel some measure of nostalgia.
4 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
The new world order 'according to Trump
With the audacious snatch and grab raid that extracted Nicolás Maduro to face trial in the United States, Washington sent a clear message to its allies and adversaries:
3 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
The phone is ringing, but is it a scam? I'll ask my assistant
I am staring at my computer when my phone rings.
3 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
The unlikely genius of Getdown Services
Scatological lyrics, social conscience, a commitment to fun and a shoutout from Walton Goggins - 2026 is going to be the laptop garage band's year
3 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Behind the race to get Americans back on the moon
With astronauts set to fly around the moon for the first time in more than half a century when Artemis 2 makes its ascent sometime this spring, 2026 was already destined to become a standout year in space.
3 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Striking it rich The US plan for involvement in Venezuela's 'bust' oil sector
The Venezuelan oil industry has been “a total bust” for a long time, according to Donald Trump.
2 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Life after extinction Science or science fiction?
A startup's plans for resurrecting lost creatures have caught the public's imagination but many researchers doubt that such a feat is possible
5 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
It's a ridiculous time to be a man'
A group of male comedians is at the forefront of a new genre of social media comedy poking fun at our ever-shifting notions of modern masculinity
4 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Charting the global economy in 2026
With inflation predicted to cool, rising unemployment, weak growth and trade tensions pose fresh risks, while high debt and AI add to uncertainty in the year ahead
4 mins
January 09, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
High stakes for Mamdani as he must now deliver on his promises to New York
The multiple firsts achieved by New York’s new mayor, Zohran Mamdani, have been well chronicled: he is the first Muslim to occupy that role, the first south Asian and the first to be born in Africa.
2 mins
January 09, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
