Taliban confirms final list of government appointees includes no women

The government’s spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said they need time to ‘process women’s demands’

Alisha Rahaman Sarkar
Tuesday 21 September 2021 07:39 EDT
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Taliban fail to appoint any women in all male, all Taliban government

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The Taliban expanded their interim cabinet on Tuesday by announcing a list of deputy ministers but failed to name any woman despite facing an international backlash.

The rulers appointed 2 acting ministers, 11 deputy ministers. According to 1TVNewsAF, Nooruddin Azizi, a businessman from Panjshir, was appointed as the acting minister of commerce, while a businessman from Baghlan Mohammad Bashir was appointed as his deputy.

Dr Qalandar Ebad who takes over the ministry of health faces the mammoth task of bringing down Covid-19 cases in Afghanistan.

Abdul Qayoum Zakir was appointed as deputy minister of defence, Engineer Najibullah was appointed as the atomic energy chief and Nazar Mohammad Mutmaeb was appointed the acting head of the National Olympic Committee.

The government's spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid presented the list of deputies at a news conference in Kabul. Defending the all-male cabinet, Mr Mujahid said that it included members of ethnic minorities, such as the Hazaras.

He added that women might be added later although there was no announcement of the formation of a women's ministry. Answering a question, he said the caretaker government needs time to address women's demands on education and work to ensure their safety.

"We are working to complete the procedures so that girls can resume their education," he said. Boys in grades 6 to 12 went back to school over the weekend.

The Taliban has been lambasted by Western governments for not including women in ministerial and government roles. On Saturday, the Taliban set up a ministry for the “propagation of virtue and the prevention of vice” in the building that once housed the ministry of women's affairs.

The Islamist militants, during their earlier rule in Afghanistan between 1996 to 2001 had banned women from schools, work and public life.

Activists and female staff organised a protest on Sunday over the Taliban’s decision to disband the women’s ministry. They had reportedly been trying to return to work at the ministry for several weeks but were turned away each time.

Mr Mujahid stressed that the current government is an interim one without hinting at any possible election in the future.

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