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formerly known as Womens Liberation Front.
A website
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'WOMEN, LIFE, FREEDOM'
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When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi
figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da
qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so
called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.
Bring a mahram or die
Zan times - March 7, 2025 - By: Sana Atif* and Freshta Ghani
<<Bring a mahram or die: The Taliban threat to expectant mothers
As Zarin Gul and her daughter Nasrin ventured through the village of
Yangi Areeq, the only light came from the small lamps of their rickshaw.
Nasrin was writhing and groaning in the pain of labour, which was
intensified by the constant jolts of the rickshaw on the dirt road.
Zarin Gul was growing more anxious with every passing moment. “I kept
thinking, if only Nasrin’s husband were here. If only I could ease my
daughter’s pain,” Zarin Gul tells Zan Times. Nasrin’s husband had been
working in Iran for the past seven years and only returned home one
month a year. That night, Zarin Gul held her daughter’s hands, trying to
comfort her. During their journey to the hospital, a Taliban fighter
signaled them to stop with a flashlight. “Where are you going?” he
asked. As a frightened Zarin Gul loudly explained that her daughter was
sick and needed urgent medical attention, one of the three Taliban
fighters standing there ignored her distress and instead asked, “Where
is your mahram?” They didn’t have one. Again, Zarin Gul explained that
her daughter’s condition was critical and that her husband was in Iran,
but the Taliban fighters were firm: “You must bring a mahram. Otherwise,
we will not allow you to go to the hospital.” “I begged them, telling
them my daughter was dying. I pleaded for their permission,” she
recalls. “But they still refused. In desperation, I lied and said the
rickshaw driver was my nephew and our guardian. Only then did they let
us pass.”
After that encounter at a Taliban checkpoint, Zarin Gul managed to get
her daughter to a private hospital. But it was too late. Nasrin’s baby
had already died in her womb, and her uterus had ruptured. The doctors
warned that her life was in danger and she needed to be immediately
transferred to a government hospital. So the 62-year-old mother set out
once again with her suffering daughter, this time toward a government
hospital an hour away. Zarin Gul never imagined that her daughter’s
eighth childbirth would turn into a matter of life and death. When her
daughter first started feeling pain, she had taken her to a midwife, who
gave her an artificial labour-inducing injection. Instead of helping, it
only worsened Nasrin’s bleeding. Zarin Gul explains that the midwife
lacked proper training and had been appointed to the local clinic due to
her Taliban connections: “She used to administer polio vaccines to
children, nothing more. But with influence, she became a midwife, and
now women in the area have no choice but to seek her help.” On their way
to the government hospital, mother and daughter were stopped at two more
Taliban checkpoints. Each time, they were detained for long periods
because they lacked a male guardian. Zarin Gul says they were only
allowed to pass through the second checkpoint after she cried and
begged. But at the third checkpoint, even her tears and pleading had no
effect: “In the end, the rickshaw driver had to leave his identification
documents as a guarantee before they let us go.” After repeated
obstacles, Zarin Gul finally reached the government hospital — but the
delays had proved deadly. “The doctors told us that due to excessive
bleeding and the ruptured uterus, both the baby and the mother had
died,” she tells Zan Times. S. “They performed a C-section on my
daughter after she had already passed away. What was the point? We
buried them side by side.” The Taliban’s policy requiring a male
guardian for women in labour wanting to reach health facilities,
combined with limited access to healthcare, unsafe roads, and a culture
that neglects women’s health, has significantly increased maternal
deaths in Afghanistan. Many women lose their lives because of these
restrictions. Nasrin’s seven children are now growing up without their
mother. This report on the impact of the Taliban’s rigid policies on
women in childbirth is based on interviews with 27 healthcare workers,
14 postpartum women, and three families who lost their loved ones during
childbirth from provinces including Helmand, Kandahar, Nangarhar, Parwan,
Kapisa, Panjshir, Ghazni, Takhar, Jawzjan, Samangan, Faryab, Badakhshan,
Baghlan, Herat, and Kabul. Hospital staff tell Zan Times that female
patients and doctors are prohibited from entering healthcare facilities
without a mahram due to orders from the Taliban’s Ministry for the
Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. Interviews with women and
their families reveal that due to the Taliban’s rigid policies, many
skilled female doctors have resigned, leaving untrained and
inexperienced personnel to take their places in hospitals. Zan Times is
seeing the impact of those Taliban decisions through on-the-ground
reporting inside Afghanistan. Our team regularly speaks with medical
personnel, hospital officials, and women needing healthcare.
Consistently, they report that the system is collapsing — female medical
professionals are being pushed out, and maternal deaths are increasing.
In early February, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that approximately 600 women die
for every 100,000 births in Afghanistan, a maternal mortality rate three
times higher than the global average. While that statistic is from 2020,
it is still used because no comprehensive updates have since been
published. Other reports highlight the increasingly precarious situation
facing women in childbirth. In 2023, an academic survey of Afghan
healthcare workers revealed that more than 40 percent reported a
decrease in maternal and child healthcare availability while 26 percent
saw an increase in obstetric and newborn complications. In 2024, UN
Women projected that the impact of keeping girls out of school and women
out of university would correlate with a 45 percent increase in early
childbearing rates and a 50 percent increased risk of maternal
mortality. In addition, the recent OCHR report stated that the country’s
long-term public health system is further threatened by the Taliban’s
decision in early December 2024 to close all medical educational
institutions to women, including semi-professional courses. The growing
shortage of qualified medical professionals and midwives has put the
lives of women and children at serious risk, particularly in rural
areas. In these regions where few trained doctors are available, women
and children lack timely access to proper medical treatment. As a
result, many women die from preventable and treatable conditions,
including childbirth complications. If that weren’t enough, expectant
mothers are also struggling to feed themselves with nutritional food.
OCHA has warned that this year an estimated 22.9 million people in
Afghanistan will require humanitarian aid, with 14.8 million — more than
a third of the population — facing severe food insecurity. The report
further highlighted that 1.1 million women require urgent medical care.
Samina*, a midwife working in a government hospital in Kandahar, tells
Zan Times that there is not enough medical staff at her hospital to
treat the more than 100 women who seek medical care each day. She
confirms that women will only be admitted if they are accompanied by a
male mahram. Speaking to Zan Times, Samina recounts an incident from a
few days earlier: “A young woman arrived at the hospital after giving
birth in a taxi. Her baby had died on the way due to a lack of oxygen.
When I asked her why she hadn’t come to the hospital sooner, she
replied, ‘I had to wait for my husband to return from work. I had no
other male guardian.’” Another reliable source from Mirwais Regional
Hospital, a major government hospital in Kandahar, tells Zan Times that
250 women come in for childbirth every 24 hours. “This hospital receives
patients not only from Kandahar but also from Zabul and Uruzgan. Most
arrive in critical condition, and some die simply because they were
brought in too late. Some babies die in the womb, while others pass away
within minutes of birth,” the source explains, noting that, for the year
ending in February 2025, the hospital recorded at least 800 maternal
deaths and more than 1,000 newborn deaths. The source also confirms that
the Taliban’s Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of
Vice has strictly ordered hospitals not to admit women without a male
guardian: “Every morning, we inform patients that coming to the hospital
without a male guardian is prohibited. This rule is strictly enforced by
the Taliban, and no one dares to defy it.” When 26-year-old Zamarrud, a
resident of Kishm district in Badakhshan, went into labour five months
ago, her husband was in Iran. Soon after the labour pains began, her
water broke, indicating a possible ruptured amniotic sac. But there was
no man in the house to take her to the hospital. Her mother-in-law and
sister-in-law decided to take her on foot. “I felt dizzy on the way, and
I couldn’t walk. My mother-in-law and sister-in-law had to hold me up
and drag me along,” Zamarrud recounts to Zan Times. After a two-hour
walk, the exhausted and pain-ravaged woman finally arrived at the
hospital — only to be denied entry because she had no mahram. She waited
outside, pleading for help, for 40 minutes, before being allowed inside.
Doctors immediately took her to the emergency room, but her baby was
already dead. “My baby was gone. Carrying a child for nine long months
and then not being able to hold them in your arms — it feels like
dying,” she says. Due to a shortage of unoccupied beds in the hospital,
Zamarrud was discharged just a few hours after childbirth. With no
strength to walk, her mother-in-law placed her on a donkey. The journey
along rough, winding roads worsened her postpartum wounds. “My stitches
started bleeding, but I had no choice but to continue. By the time I got
home, I was half dead. And once there, I had nothing but painkillers to
rely on,” she recalls. Since returning to power in 2021, the Taliban
have stripped Afghan women of nearly all their rights — banning them
from education, work, travel, leisure, and even public baths. Their
policies have also discouraged the few remaining female healthcare
professionals from continuing their work, further deteriorating an
already fragile healthcare system. A midwife from Takhar province says
that officials from the Taliban’s Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue
and Prevention of Vice constantly harass and humiliate female medical
staff: “We try our best to do our jobs, but the pressure is unbearable.
Many of us just want to quit. Sometimes, they insult us, claiming our
clothing is ‘un-Islamic.’ But women who are the sole providers for their
families have no choice but to stay.” She also describes shocking
instances of Taliban interference in emergency situations: “One day, our
emergency ward was overwhelmed with patients. That section is for women
only, and men are not allowed. But Taliban enforcers barged in and took
away three female nurses, claiming their uniforms were inappropriate.
They made them sign a pledge to wear longer clothing before letting them
go.” She struggles to explain the cruelty of the Taliban: “Even in
life-and-death emergencies, instead of letting doctors treat patients,
they arrest female staff over their clothing.”
*Names have been changed to protect the identity of the interviewees and
writer. Sana Atif is a pseudonym for a Zan Times journalist in
Afghanistan.
This report was produced with contributions from Mahtab Safi and Hura
Omar.>>
Source:
https://zantimes.com/2025/03/07/bring-a-mahram-or-die-the-taliban-threat-to-expectant-mothers/
Women's
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2025