What could happen to Afghan women should the Taliban return to power
KABUL: Hiding in her basement, a Kunduz radio presenter was paralysed with fear when the Taliban came looking for her as they conducted house-to-house searches for working women after storming the northern Afghan city.
Long condemned as misogynistic zealots, the Taliban have sought to project a softened stance on female rights, but the insurgents' three-day occupation of Kunduz offers an ominous blueprint of what could happen should they ever return to power.
Harrowing testimonies have emerged of death squads methodically targeting a host of female rights workers and journalists just hours after the city fell on September 28.
When they knocked on the radio host's door, her uncle answered, she told AFP, requesting anonymity due to safety concerns.
“We know a woman in your house works in an office,” she said they told him.
“When my uncle denied it, he was taken outside and shot dead. His body lay in the streets for days — no one dared to go out and get it.”
Such testimonies hark back to the Taliban's 1996-2001 rule of Afghanistan, when women were relegated to the shadows.
Rights groups say female prisoners in Kunduz were raped and midwives were targeted for providing reproductive health services to women.
Rampaging insurgents destroyed three radio stations run by women, looted a girls' school and ransacked offices working for female empowerment, stealing their computers and smashing their equipment, according to several sources including activists and local residents.
One of their main targets were women's shelters, which give refuge countrywide to runaway girls, domestic abuse victims and those at the risk of “honour killings” by their relatives.