KABUL: In a report on the transfer of a journalist, who fled Afghanistan, has illustrated how life has taken 180 degrees for Afghan women after falling Afghanistan to the Taliban.
Hollie McKay, wrote in Dallas Morning News said that after takeover of Kabul last week, the Taliban had become houses in the country, looking for more than 15 women and women to get married.
McKay said that even though he could leave Mazar-e-Sharif, his Afghan friends who remained behind peeled down by fear of unknown things that awaited them.
“I think of how difficult women have struggled for their freedom in this country, just to make them framed by clicking on the finger of the rebellion,” McKay said.
McKay wrote about a 14 year old girl he met at the transfer hub on the outskirts of Kabul early that week.
The girl had run a lifetime from the battle in Kunduz and only wanted education and one day became a doctor.
He also wrote about other Afghan women, Fariha was easier, which he met a year earlier.
Fariba, who was once the voice of fighting Afghan women and explored a fluctuati country to bring stories of Afghanistan women to turn on and become a strong force for change, entering into one million pieces after the Taliban takeover.
“My friends outside begged me to leave my country,” Fario said.
“But how can I, when my sister suffered?”, Reported Dallas’s morning news.
“But the pain and invisibility were not all fears of activists who were very dared by a friend’s house in Badakhshan, who fell into the group a few months ago, looking for young brides.
Fario told me the story he heard from his friend,” McKay said.
“They said that they were rescuers, Islamic guards, West liberas,” Fario said in a small but firm voice.
“They asked a father to give his daughter as wife.
They said one of the Taliban was a mullah, and they had to make an engagement for him.” Only the request, as told Fario, was rhetorical.
No choice.
A 21-year-old child who was not married was taken away in the middle of the night.
“After the wedding, they took the young woman.
But his father knew after three days it wasn’t just the Taliban who married him and had sex with him, he was raped by the other four every night,” Fario tells the story.
“The Father goes to the district governor and is told that there is nothing he can do.
Whatever you can do, he must do himself.” In a slim silver layer to a drastic sad tragedy, the father fled with all his daughters hiding, reporting McKay.
Prospects forcibly married to the Taliban now befall millions of Afghan girls and women; Security blankets after being provided to them by the presence of NATO had been torn, reported morning news Dallas.
“Nothing has changed.
They [Taliban] trying to say that they have changed their behavior, but they haven’t,” Fario said, Quiver in his soft voice.
“They haven’t changed, and they will not change.
They are defined by violence, kill, by violating constant human rights.” “In my own experience in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif for falling on Saturday, I saw a crowded city full of women soon becoming a ghost town.
Some women who finally stepped into the sun in blue.
Burqas, Not visible or heard, “McKay said.