UNICEF calls on the Taliban to lift ban on girls’ education as new school year begins in Afghanistan

UNICEF calls on the Taliban to lift ban on girls’ education as new school year begins in Afghanistan
Afghan school girls attend their classroom on the first day of the new school year, in Kabul, on March 25, 2023. (AP/File)
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Updated 22 March 2025

UNICEF calls on the Taliban to lift ban on girls’ education as new school year begins in Afghanistan

UNICEF calls on the Taliban to lift ban on girls’ education as new school year begins in Afghanistan
  • Afghanistan is the only country in the world that bans female secondary and higher education, with Taliban justifying ban
  • The ban has deprived 400,000 more girls of their right to education, bringing the total to 2.2 million, the UN agency says

ISLAMABAD: The UN children’s agency on Saturday urged Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers to immediately lift a lingering ban on girls’ education to save the future of millions who have been deprived of their right to education since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.
The appeal by UNICEF comes as a new school year began in Afghanistan without girls beyond sixth grade. The ban, said the agency, has deprived 400,000 more girls of their right to education, bringing the total to 2.2 million.
Afghanistan is the only country in the world that bans female secondary and higher education, with the Taliban justifying the ban saying it doesn’t comply with their interpretation of Sharia, or Islamic law.
“For over three years, the rights of girls in Afghanistan have been violated,” Catherine Russell, UNICEF executive director, said in a statement. “All girls must be allowed to return to school now. If these capable, bright young girls continue to be denied an education, then the repercussions will last for generations.”
A ban on the education of girls will harm the future of millions of Afghan girls, she said, adding that if the ban persists until 2030, “more than four million girls will have been deprived of their right to education beyond primary school.” The consequences, she added, will be “catastrophic.”
Russell warned that the decline in female doctors and midwives will leave women and girls without crucial medical care. This situation is projected to result in an estimated 1,600 additional maternal deaths and over 3,500 infant deaths. “These are not just numbers, they represent lives lost and families shattered,” she said.
The Afghan Taliban government earlier this year skipped a Pakistan-hosted global conference where Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai condemned the state of women’s and girl’s rights in Afghanistan as gender apartheid.


Dozens of Afghans say colleagues, relatives killed after UK data breach

Dozens of Afghans say colleagues, relatives killed after UK data breach
Updated 10 sec ago

Dozens of Afghans say colleagues, relatives killed after UK data breach

Dozens of Afghans say colleagues, relatives killed after UK data breach
  • Evidence to inquiry into MoD leak finds 49 people lost family members or associates as a result of identities being revealed
  • Details of almost 19,000 people who worked for UK government in Afghanistan were leaked 6 months after Taliban seized Kabul

LONDON: Dozens of Afghans whose identities were leaked by the British Ministry of Defence said they have had family members or colleagues killed as a result of the data breach, research for a parliamentary investigation has found.

A spreadsheet containing the details of almost 19,000 people who had worked for the UK government in Afghanistan was accidentally leaked from the MoD in February 2022 — six months after the Taliban seized the capital Kabul.

Research involving 350 Afghans affected by the leak found that 231 said the ministry had contacted them directly to tell them their data had been breached.

Of those, 49 said family members or colleagues had been killed as a result of their details being leaked.

More than 40 percent had received direct death threats and at least half reported that friends or family had been threatened by the Taliban. 

The study, part of evidence submitted to a defense select committee inquiry into the breach, was carried out by the charity Refugee Legal Support, Lancaster University, and the University of York.

A former member of the Afghan special forces who took part in the research said his home had been searched and family members attacked as a result.

“My father was brutally beaten to the point that his toenails were forcibly removed, and my parents remain under constant and serious threat,” he said. “My family and I continue to face intimidation, repeated house searches, and ongoing danger to our safety.”

Others surveyed said the delay between when the data leak was discovered in 2023, and when they were contacted in July this year to say their identities had been released, had further risked their safety.

“Waiting almost two years to inform individuals that their personal data was compromised has put many lives at risk unnecessarily,” a former Afghan National Army member currently residing in Afghanistan said. “Immediate notification could have allowed us to take protective measures much earlier.”

Refugee Legal Support’s Executive Director Olivia Clark said the research laid bare “the devastating human consequences” of the data breach.

“Afghans who served alongside UK forces have reported renewed threats, violent assaults, and even the killing of family members after their personal details were exposed,” she said.

She added only a minority of those affected by the data breach had been offered relocation to the UK.

The British government estimated more than 7,300 Afghans would be eligible for resettlement in the UK under a scheme set up in 2024 to help move those at risk from the data breach to the UK.


Afghan, Pakistan peace talks enter third day as Trump again offers help

Afghan, Pakistan peace talks enter third day as Trump again offers help
Updated 27 October 2025

Afghan, Pakistan peace talks enter third day as Trump again offers help

Afghan, Pakistan peace talks enter third day as Trump again offers help

ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan and Pakistan officials meet in Istanbul on Monday for a third day of talks after failing to clinch a lasting peace, three sources familiar with the matter said, as US President Donald Trump repeated an offer to mediate.
The South Asian neighbors agreed to a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19 after days of border clashes that killed dozens in the worst such violence since the Taliban seized power in Kabul in 2021.
The current second round of peace talks mediated by Turkiye aims to hammer out a long-term truce, but both sides have offered markedly different interpretations of the talks.
Two Pakistan security sources accused the Afghan Taliban of not cooperating with the 
dialogue process.
“The Pakistani delegation has made it clear that no compromise is possible on our core demands on cross border terrorism,” one of the sources said.
A Taliban delegate to the talks dismissed as “false” the suggestion that the Islamist group was holding up the talks, adding that the discussions were still in progress.
“Overall the meeting is going well and we discussed multiple issues in a friendly environment,” the person said.
The sources spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak publicly 
on the issue.
In comments on Monday to state broadcaster RTA, Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said, “The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan supports dialogue and believes that problems and issues can be resolved through dialogue.”
A spokesperson for Pakistan’s foreign ministry declined to comment on the current 
status of talks.

HIGHLIGHT

The clashes began after Pakistan’s air strike this month on Kabul, the Afghan capital, targeting the head of the Pakistani Taliban, a militant group separate from the Taliban that rules Afghanistan.

On Saturday, Pakistan’s defense minister said he believed Afghanistan wanted peace but that failure to reach an agreement in the Istanbul talks would mean “open war.”

Late on Sunday, Trump repeated an offer to help end the conflict.
“I’ll get that solved very quickly, I know them both,” he said in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur on the sidelines of a regional summit.
“I have no doubt we are going to get that done quickly.”
The clashes began after Pakistan’s air strike this month on Kabul, the Afghan capital, targeting the head of the Pakistani Taliban, a militant group separate from the Taliban that rules Afghanistan.
The Taliban responded with attacks on Pakistani military posts along the length of the 2,600 km (1,600 miles) border.
Pakistan accuses the Taliban of allowing the Pakistani Taliban to operate with impunity inside Afghanistan, from where it launches attacks on Pakistani security forces. Kabul denies this.
Clashes between Pakistan and the Pakistani Taliban over the weekend killed five Pakistani soldiers and 25 militants near the border with Afghanistan, the military said on Sunday.


Macao promises halal food as it opens up to Middle East travelers

Macao promises halal food as it opens up to Middle East travelers
Updated 27 October 2025

Macao promises halal food as it opens up to Middle East travelers

Macao promises halal food as it opens up to Middle East travelers
  • Macao spans 30 sq. km and has one of the world’s highest GDPs per capita
  • It sent its first special tourism delegation to Riyadh in February this year

MACAO: Macao, one of China’s two special administrative regions, is preparing to welcome visitors from the Middle East, its tourism chief said on Monday, as the city increases efforts to expand its halal food and Muslim-friendly travel options.

Located in the Pearl River Delta on China’s southern coast, Macao was a Portuguese colony for over 400 years. In 1999, its sovereignty was officially transferred back to China, which made it one of its two special administrative regions, alongside Hong Kong.

The city spans only 30 sq. km and has a population of about 700,000, who enjoy one of the world’s highest gross domestic products per capita.

Among Macao’s key sectors is tourism, which it recently started to orient also toward the Middle Eastern market. In February this year, the Macao Government Tourism Office sent a special trade delegation to Riyadh and Dubai to promote the city as a travel destination.

“It’s the first time that we are doing our own seminars there. We used to participate in the Arabian Travel Market for quite some years already, but really doing something on our own — it’s the first time that we’re doing that. It’s a new market which we are moving into,” MGTO Director Maria Helena de Senna Fernandes told Arab News.

“We have started with training programs for our local hoteliers, as well as our travel agencies, as well as other people who are working in the tourism industry ... to give them a deeper understanding of what Muslim travelers need.”

One of the key elements of the effort is raising awareness about Muslim dietary rules among local establishments and a certification program for those that are ready to enter the market.

Ahead of sending a delegation to Riyadh, the MGTO published its first travel guide for Muslim tourists to offer tips on cultural, shopping, recreational, and family activities, as well as information on halal-certified products and dining options, including Middle Eastern and local fare.

Maria Helena de Senna Fernandes, director of the Macao Government Tourism Office, speaks to Arab News in Macao, Oct. 27, 2025. (MGTO)

“It’s a step-by-step process,” the city’s tourism chief said. “We have a very concerted effort to encourage our hoteliers as well as our restaurateurs to eventually get more halal certification ... I think a lot of them are feeling that they would like to come on board.”

Besides hosting luxurious resorts, hiking trails, international events such as one of Asia’s oldest Grand Prix races, and numerous cultural festivals, Macao also takes pride in its architecture and culinary scene.

The city’s historic center is designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with over 20 landmarks that blend traditional Chinese and Portuguese styles, as well as Moorish influences.

In 2017, Macao was officially designated a UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy for its distinct, historic and living culinary traditions, in which over 400 years of Portuguese presence blended with southern Chinese, Southeast Asian, and even African influences, giving rise to Macanese cuisine — the world’s first such fusion.

“We believe that there’s a lot of cultural elements that we can show to the world and, in particular, to friends from the GCC countries,” Senna Fernandes said.

“Sometimes you feel familiar, but sometimes you feel a little bit exotic because of that kind of East-West culture coming together. I guess it’s a very comfortable place to be. It’s a small place, but at the same time it has a lot of very unique things to offer. It has heritage, but at the same time it has all the modern amenities that you can enjoy yourselves in.”


Koike heads to Arab region to boost ties with Tokyo

Koike's tour began on Oct. 26 and she will head back to Tokyo on Nov. 3. (ANJ)
Koike's tour began on Oct. 26 and she will head back to Tokyo on Nov. 3. (ANJ)
Updated 27 October 2025

Koike heads to Arab region to boost ties with Tokyo

Koike's tour began on Oct. 26 and she will head back to Tokyo on Nov. 3. (ANJ)
  • The trip aims to highlight the Japanese capital’s dynamic appeal
  • More than 150 mayors, leaders and speakers from over 300 cities around the world were invited to the summit

TOKYO: Tokyo Governor Koike Yuriko will join the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh on Tuesday as she embarks on a tour taking her to , the UAE, Kuwait and Egypt.

The trip aims to highlight the Japanese capital’s dynamic appeal, while also offering the governor the chance to explore a region she believes is flourishing with new investment opportunities.

She will attend the FII’s ninth edition to present Tokyo’s initiatives to establish itself as a leading hub for innovation and finance in Asia.

Koike also hopes to develop meaningful connections and foster a sense of shared prosperity and mutual gain for both Tokyo and the Arab nations.

She arrived in the UAE’s Abu Dhabi on Sunday and attended the 2025 Asia-Pacific Cities Summit and Mayors’ Forum, which runs from Oct. 27-29 and is hosted by Expo City Dubai at the Dubai Exhibition Centre.

Koike was a key speaker on Monday at the forum, which is held under the patronage of Crown Prince of Dubai and UAE Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum.

Koike's tour began on Oct. 26 and she will head back to Tokyo on Nov. 3. (ANJ)

More than 150 mayors, leaders and speakers from over 300 cities around the world were invited to the summit.

Koike’s itinerary also includes Jeddah, Kuwait City, and Giza in Egypt. The importance of this trip is underlined by her participation in international conferences, speeches and discussions with governments and non-profit foundations.

“This region is currently attracting global attention for its economic growth and investment opportunities,” the governor told Arab News Japan. “Through this trip, I will work to enhance Tokyo’s presence as a leading global city, while applying the insights gained from international urban collaboration with the administration of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government.”

Koike will be accompanied by Takahashi Yoichi, the renowned manga artist behind Captain Tsubasa (known as Captain Majid in the Arab region). He will contribute to the cultural exchange aspect of the trip, using his influence and art to bridge cultural gaps and foster understanding between Japan and the Arab region.

The tour will include ’s second-largest city, Jeddah, when the governor will exchange ideas with local government officials.

“Together, we will explore opportunities for inter-city collaboration in areas such as economic and industrial development,” she said, emphasizing the potential for mutual growth and collaboration.

Koike will arrive in Kuwait on Oct. 29, where she will meet with government officials to discuss tackling common challenges across industries, startups and women’s empowerment.

“We aim to exchange perspectives on potential future collaboration between our cities and within international networks, fostering partnerships among cities committed to sustainable growth,” she said.

The governor often visits Cairo, where she attended university, and this year marks the 35th anniversary of the friendship city agreement between the Cairo Governorate and the Japanese capital.

“At the invitation of the Egyptian government, I am honored to attend the opening ceremony of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza,” Koike said. “I hope the cultural programs and other events featured in the ceremony will serve as an inspiration for advancing Tokyo’s initiatives.”

She added: “To all my dear friends across the Arab region, thank you so much for the generous invitations to take part in such meaningful meetings and visits. Throughout human history, this region has been buffeted by the storms of civilization, weathering the rise and fall of empires and dynasties. As a result, I believe it has cultivated a rich diversity of cultures and a profound wisdom for navigating change — qualities that are truly exceptional among world regions.

“While studying at university in Egypt, I encountered a different culture and learned the importance of embracing differences. That experience has been a great source of strength as I have faced various challenges as governor. The Arab people are dear friends to me, and I believe this visit will further deepen the bonds between Tokyo and the Arab world.”

The governor’s tour, which began on Oct 26, will end on Nov. 3 when she heads back to Tokyo.


Private donors gave more than $125M to keep foreign aid programs going after US cuts

Private donors gave more than $125M to keep foreign aid programs going after US cuts
Updated 27 October 2025

Private donors gave more than $125M to keep foreign aid programs going after US cuts

Private donors gave more than $125M to keep foreign aid programs going after US cuts
  • Multiple groups launched fundraisers in February and eventually, these emergency funds mobilized more than $125 million within eight months, a sum that while not nearly enough, was more than the organizers had ever imagined possible

NEW YORK: When the Trump administration froze foreign assistance overnight, urgent efforts began to figure out how to continue critical aid programs that could be funded by private donors.
Multiple groups launched fundraisers in February and eventually, these emergency funds mobilized more than $125 million within eight months, a sum that while not nearly enough, was more than the organizers had ever imagined possible.
In those early days, even with needs piling up, wealthy donors and private foundations grappled with how to respond. Of the thousands of programs the US funded abroad, which ones could be saved and which would have the biggest impact if they continued?
“We were fortunate enough to be in connection with and communication with some very strategic donors who understood quickly that the right answer for them was actually an answer for the field,” said Sasha Gallant, who led a team at the US Agency for International Development that specialized in identifying programs that were both cost effective and impactful.
Members of Gallant’s team, some of whom had been fired and others working outside of business hours, pulled together a list that eventually included 80 programs they recommended to private donors. In September, Project Resource Optimization, as their effort came to be called, announced all of the programs had been funded, with more than $110 million mobilized in charitable grants. Other emergency funds raised at least an additional $15 million.
Those funds are just the most visible that private donors mobilized in response to the unprecedented withdrawal of US foreign aid. It’s possible private foundations and individual donors gave much more, but those gifts won’t be reported for many months.
For the Trump administration, the closure of USAID was a cause for celebration. In July, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the agency had little to show for itself since the end of the Cold War.
“Development objectives have rarely been met, instability has often worsened, and anti-American sentiment has only grown,” Rubio said in a statement.
Going forward, Rubio said the State Department will focus on providing trade and investment, not aid, and will negotiate agreements directly with countries, minimizing the involvement of nonprofits and contractors.
Some new donors were motivated by the emergency
Some private donations came from foundations, who decided to grant out more this year than they had planned and were willing to do so because they trusted PRO’s analysis, Gallant said. For example, the grantmaker GiveWell said it gave out $34 million it otherwise would not have to directly respond to the aid cuts, including $1.9 million to a program recommended by PRO.
Others were new donors, like Jacob and Annie Ma-Weaver, a San Francisco-based couple in their late-thirties who, through their work at a hedge fund and a major tech company respectively, had earned enough that they planned to eventually give away significant sums. Jacob Ma-Weaver said the US aid cuts caused needless deaths and were shocking, but he also saw in the moment a chance to make a big difference.
“It was an opportunity for us and one that I think motivated us to accelerate our lifetime giving plans, which were very vague and amorphous, into something tangible that we could do right now,” he said.
The Ma-Weavers gave more than $1 million to projects selected by PRO and decided to speak publicly about their giving to encourage others to join them.
“It’s actually very uncomfortable in our society — maybe it shouldn’t be — to tell the world that you’re giving away money,” Jacob Ma-Weaver said. “There’s almost this embarrassment of riches about it, quite literally.”
Private donors could not support whole USAID programs
The funds that PRO mobilized did not backfill USAID’s grants dollar for dollar. Instead, PRO’s team worked with the implementing organizations to pare down their budgets to only the most essential parts of the most impactful projects.
For example, Helen Keller Intl ran multiple USAID-funded programs providing nutrition and treatment for neglected tropical diseases. All of those programs were eventually terminated, taking away almost a third of Helen Keller’s overall revenue.
Shawn Baker, an executive vice president at Helen Keller, said as soon as it became clear that the US funding was not coming back, they started to triage their programming. When PRO contacted them, he said they were able to provide a much smaller budget for private funders. Instead of the $7 million annual budget for a nutrition program in Nigeria, they proposed $1.5 million to keep it running.
Another nonprofit, Village Enterprise, received $1.3 million through PRO. But they were also able to raise $2 million from their own donors through a special fundraising appeal and drew on an unrestricted $7 million gift from billionaire and author MacKenzie Scott that they’d received in 2023. The flexible funding allowed them to sustain their most essential programming during what CEO Dianne Calvi called seven months of uncertainty.
That many organizations managed to hold on and keep programs running, even after significant funding cuts, was a surprise to the researchers at PRO. Since February, the small staff supporting PRO have extended their commitment to the project one month at a time, expecting that either donations would dry up or projects would no longer be viable.
“That time that we were able to buy has been absolutely invaluable in our ability to reach more people who are interested in stepping in,” said Rob Rosenbaum, the team lead at PRO and a former USAID employee. He said they have taken a lot of pride in mobilizing donors who have not previously given to these causes.
“To be able to convince somebody who might otherwise not spend this money at all or sit on it to move it into this field right now, that is the most important dollar that we can move,” he said.
Other donors may wait to see what is next
Not all private donors were eager to jump into the chasm created by the US foreign aid cuts, which happened without any “rhyme or reason,” said Dean Karlan, the chief economist at USAID when the Trump administration took over in January.
Despite the extraordinary mobilization of resources by some private funders, Karlan said, “You have to realize there’s also a fair amount of reluctance, rightly so, to clean up a mess that creates a moral hazard problem.”
The uncertainty about what the US will fund going forward is likely to continue for some time. The emergency funds offered a short term response from interested private funders, many of whom are now trying to support the development of whatever comes next.
For Karlan, who is now a professor of economics at Northwestern University, it is painful to see the consequences of the aid cuts on recipient populations. He also resents the attacks on the motivations of aid workers in general.
Nonetheless, he said many in the field want to see the administration rebuild a system that is efficient and targeted. But Karlan said, he hasn’t yet seen any steps, “that give us a glimpse of how serious they’re going to be in terms of actually spending money effectively.”