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Home / Afghanistan’s ‘gender apartheid’ should be an international crime: UN expert

Afghanistan’s ‘gender apartheid’ should be an international crime: UN expert

2023-06-20  Correspondent

Afghanistan’s ‘gender apartheid’ should be an international crime: UN expert

GENEVA - The United Nation’s top expert on human rights in Afghanistan urged countries yesterday to consider making “gender apartheid” an international crime, helping hold the Taliban accountable for its grave and systematic abuses against Afghan women.

Since ousting a foreign-backed government in August 2021, the Taliban authorities have imposed an austere Sharia law, barring girls from secondary school, pushing women out of many government jobs, preventing them from traveling without a male relative, and ordering them to cover up outside the home.

“It is imperative that we do not look away,” said Richard Bennett while addressing the UN Human Rights Council.

Presenting his latest report, the UN special rapporteur on the situation in Afghanistan, Bennett told the council the Taliban’s actions could constitute the crime against humanity of “gender persecution”.

In addition, “grave, systematic and institutionalised discrimination against women and girls is at the heart of Taliban ideology and rule, which also gives rise to concerns that they may be responsible for gender apartheid”, he said.

He insisted that such “serious human rights violations, which although not yet an explicit international crime, requires further study”.

Framing gender apartheid as an international crime would highlight those other countries and the broader international community “have a duty to take effective action to end the practice”.

“Women often talk about being buried alive and not being able to do much else without facing restrictions and punishments,” said Shaharzad Akbar, the head of the Rawadari rights group and former head of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission.

“The Taliban have turned Afghanistan into a mass graveyard of Afghan women and girls’ ambitions, dreams, and potential,” said Akbar.

The UN has already labelled the situation in Afghanistan under the Taliban as “gender-based apartheid”, but the term is not currently recognised under the Rome Statute among the worst international crimes.

Bennett and others called on countries to consider changing that.

Akbar backed the call, urging the council to “support the inclusion of gender apartheid in the Draft Convention on Crimes Against Humanity.”

Bennett’s report drafted jointly with the UN’s working group on discrimination against women and girls called on countries to “mandate a report on gender apartheid as an institutionalised system of discrimination, segregation, humiliation and exclusion of women and girls.”

This should be done, the report said, “with a view to developing further normative standards and tools, galvanising international legal condemnation and action to end it and ensure its non-repetition.”

A number of country representatives also voiced support for the idea yesterday.

Among those was the South African representative, Bronwen Levy, who urged the international community to “take action against what the report describes as gender apartheid, much like it did in support of South Africa’s struggle against racial apartheid.” -Nampa/AFP


2023-06-20  Correspondent

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