BSS
  05 Dec 2023, 22:45

Taliban rule 'made girlhood illegal', says Malala

JOHANNESBURG, Dec  5, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala

Yousafzai said Tuesday that Taliban rule in Afghanistan has made "girlhood
illegal", as she called for gender apartheid to be made a crime against
humanity.
      
 In a speech marking the 10th anniversary of the death of South Africa's
Nelson Mandela, the Pakistani  activist said: "The Taliban have made girlhood
illegal, and it is taking a toll."
      
 She highlighted how Afghan girls frozen out of school are "experiencing
depression", "turning to narcotics" and "attempting suicide".
       
Malala was the keynote speaker at an annual event held by the Mandela
Foundation to commemorate the anti-apartheid icon and fellow Nobel Peace Prize
winner.
       
After slamming what she called the "unjust bombardment of Gaza" by Israel
since the unprecedented October 7 attacks by Hamas, she said crises in Gaza,
Ukraine and Sudan had diverted attention from the treatment of women and girls
in Afghanistan.
       
"Our first imperative is to call the regime in Afghanistan what it really
is. It is a gender apartheid," said Malala who was 15 when a Pakistani group
shot her in the head over her campaign for girls' education.
       
Access to education and work for girls and women has been severely
restricted since the Taliban leaders took back power in August 2021.
       
Teenage girls and women are barred from schools and universities. Thousands
of women have lost their government jobs -- or are being paid to stay home.
       
Girls and women are also prohibited from entering parks, funfairs or gyms.
       "South Africans fought for racial apartheid to be recognised and
criminalised at the international level. In the process, they drew more of the
world's attention to the horrors of apartheid," Malala told a packed
Johannesburg theatre.
       
"But gender apartheid has not been explicitly codified yet," she said.
       
"We have an opportunity to do that right now," she added, calling for the
definition to be inserted in a new UN treaty that is currently being debated.
      
 Malala, former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton and other leading
activists are campaigning for UN member states to amend a draft crimes against
humanity treaty to include gender apartheid.