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News ID: 107363
Publish Date : 02 October 2022 - 21:25

Women Protest in Western Afghan City

HERAT (AFP) – Authorities dispersed a women’s rally in Afghanistan’s western city of Herat on Sunday, with protesters claiming they were beaten by Taliban forces who fired shots in the air.
Scores of students turned out in protest at a Friday bombing on a Kabul classroom that killed and wounded dozens of pupils as they prepared for exams.
The bomber blew himself up in the women’s section of a gender-segregated study hall in a Kabul neighborhood home to the historically oppressed Shia Muslim Hazara community.
The United Nations said at least 35 people were killed and another 82 wounded, most of them girls and young women.
On Sunday, more than 100 women -- mostly Hazara -- marched in Herat against the attack, which was one of the deadliest in recent years to strike the minority group.
“Education is our right, genocide is a crime,” the protesters chanted as they made their way from Herat University to the office of the provincial governor.
Dressed in black hijabs and headscarves, the protesters were stopped from reaching the office by heavily armed Taliban forces, who also ordered journalists not to report on the rally.
“We had no weapons but were only chanting slogans as we marched,” protester Wahida Saghri told AFP.
Another group of women students prevented from protesting in the street staged a separate rally on the campus of the university, footage obtained by AFP shows.
Women’s rights protests have seen tense standoffs with authorities since the Taliban returned to power, with demonstrators detained and rallies broken up by aerial firing.
Female activists have still tried to stage sporadic protests, most in Kabul, against a slew of restrictions imposed on them by the Taliban.
No group has so far claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack at the Kaaj Higher Educational Center in the capital.