U.N. strongly condemns Taliban’s ban on Afghan women
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Kabul/New York, April 5 – The United Nations has condemned in the strongest terms and rejected the decision by Taliban authorities to ban Afghan women from working with the U.N. in the country.

The President of the U.N. General Assembly, Csaba Kőrösi, strongly condemned the decision and said that the ban will undermine the U.N. work in the country.

“This step is a blatant violation of the human rights of women and undermines the work of the United Nations in Afghanistan, the people of which are in dire need of humanitarian assistance,” he said. “The consequences of this decision would harm the Afghan people, in particular the most vulnerable segments of the population. Afghanistan needs sustained development, and for that, it should mobilize the country’s full potential.”

Roza Otunbayeva, the U.N. special representative for Afghanistan, said: “In the history of the United Nations, no other regime has ever tried to ban women from working for the Organization just because they are women. This decision represents an assault against women, the fundamental principles of the U.N., and on international law.”

“This is yet another cruel and devastating blow against the women of Afghanistan, and one which carries grave consequences for all Afghans. The country is at further risk of even greater economic misery and isolation from the community of nations,” the envoy said.

The U.N. mission in Afghanistan said in a statement that Otunbayeva is engaging with the highest levels of the de facto Taliban authorities to protest and seek an immediate reversal of the order. It said the Taliban has issued over the past 20 months measures that increasingly restricted women and girls from participating in social, economic and political life.

The mission said it was informed by the Taliban, which took over the country in 2021, that the ban was to take effect immediately and will be actively enforced.

The U.N. said its mission in Afghanistan has about 3300 Afghan nationals and 600 internationals, including about 400 Afghan women and 200 women internationals.

The U.N said the ban is unlawful under international law and unacceptable. It also constitutes an “unparalleled violation of women’s rights, a flagrant breach of humanitarian principles, and a breach of international rules on the privileges and immunities of the United Nations, including those extended to all U.N. personnel.”

It said the ban will further impact the international community’s engagement with Afghanistan, and the U.N.’s ability to support the population as they experience an unprecedented humanitarian crisis. The U.N. said both Afghan women and men are essential to all aspects of U.N. work and the ban will impose “further psychological and emotional harm on Afghan women who have already endured so much.”

It said two-thirds of the Afghan population – some 28.3 million people – require life-saving assistance to survive, including 20 million people who are food insecure, six million of whom are one step away from famine. The order will also further negatively affect humanitarian partners’ ability to reach those most vulnerable, especially women and girls. (By J. Tuyet Nguyen)

The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) has launched a report analyzing over-compliance and misconceptions about the scope of international sanctions that have led to severe obstacles for the Afghan business community. Read the report here. Following is a press release:

The Taliban’s new extension of last year’s ban on female aid workers to the UN threatens to throw delivery of urgent life-saving humanitarian action into disarray, making the role of the private sector even more critical for the recovery of the Afghan economy.

Report: Afghanistan should be open for business, but misconceptions about sanctions are increasing suffering for millions

Over-compliance and misconceptions about the scope of international sanctions have led to severe obstacles for the Afghan business community, including for businesses that import and export food and other essential goods, finds a new report commissioned by the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC).

The report, based on in-depth interviews with Afghan businesspeople and other private sector stakeholders, calls on the international community to improve awareness about sanctions and reduce over-compliance. It argues that concrete steps must be taken to address the crippled Afghan economy and ongoing unprecedented humanitarian crisis.

“Humanitarian aid alone cannot meet the needs of the millions of Afghans who have lost their jobs and been forced to take on huge debts and sell their possessions just to be able to buy food needed for survival,” said Neil Turner, NRC’s country director in Afghanistan. “We must reverse this devastating economic disaster. A stable economy, thriving private sector, and the reintroduction of development programmes are important to complement the work of humanitarian organisations.”

Since the Taliban returned to power in 2021, international actors have pursued political and economic isolation policies towards Afghanistan, in reaction to the Taliban’s increasingly restrictive governance, that have contributed to the current economic crisis and the population’s reliance on humanitarian assistance. More than 28 million people are now on the brink of survival.

There are comprehensive exemptions to the sanctions that should enable the transfer of money in and out of Afghanistan for activities designed to address the basic needs of the population, but banks continue to restrict businesses’ access to financial services despite the exemptions in place. Afghan businesses highlighted that payment instructions for any international bank transaction that mention Afghanistan get blocked, even for transactions for food shipments via the United Nations.

“We need to educate overseas companies and banks that Afghanistan itself is not under sanctions. There is a real lack of understanding about this – particularly among key sectors in our main export and import markets,” said an executive of a large agricultural firm in Afghanistan.

The Taliban’s stance towards women has also led to the loss of many women from the Afghan workforce. These restrictions pose substantial challenges to the Afghan people and the economic prospects of the country as well as serious practical and ethical dilemmas for international donors and aid agencies.

To address the complex political, economic, and social changes since the return to power of the Taliban, NRC calls on major governments, financial institutions, UN agencies and relevant regional actors to urgently convene to establish measures to stabilise and support Afghanistan’s economy for the benefit of all the Afghan people.

“Concrete steps must be agreed to address the barriers faced by critical private sector actors in Afghanistan, including challenges in accessing financial services. On top of this, it’s vital that mechanisms are stepped-up to provide technical assistance to the Afghanistan Central Bank to support its resumption of core functions that are critical to support the Afghan economy, private sector actors, and ultimately the Afghan people who have already endured so much,” added Turner.

For more information, please contact: NRC global media hotline: media@nrc.no, +47 905 62329. Christian Jepsen, Regional Communications Adviser for Asia and Latin America: christian.jepsen@nrc.no, +254 706 248 391

 Facts and Figures: 

  • 28.3 million people, two thirds of Afghanistan’s population will need urgent humanitarian assistance in 2023 to survive. This makes Afghanistan one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises (OCHA).
  • The main driver of humanitarian need is the extremely high levels of food insecurity, with nearly 20 million people in Afghanistan acutely food-insecure (IPC 3+), including more than 6 million people on the brink of famine-like conditions in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency). Four million people are acutely malnourished, including 3.2 million children under the age of five (WFP).
  • According to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Afghanistan’s real GDP contracted by 20 percent between 2021 to 2022, equating to a loss of $5 billion, which had taken almost ten years to generate.As a consequence, per capita income declined by 14–28 percent and an estimated 700,000 jobs were lost during the same period.
  • Banking sector de-risking and overcompliance to sanctions continues to create challenges for private businesses and international banks. In the linked report, one European Bank reportedly needed 40-50 staff members to facilitate one financial transaction to Afghanistan.
  • Despite the broad exemptions to sanctions, humanitarian actors continue to face challenges accessing domestic and international banking services for Afghanistan (NRC), and remain mostly reliant on UN cash shipments (UNAMA).
  • A recent report by ACAPs demonstrates the Afghani has maintained its stability through foreign currency inflows that are part of humanitarian aid. These inflows have been vital to help stabilise the price volatility of essential food and non-food items, but if jeopardised it will have a serious impact on the stability of the economy and banking sector.

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