After twenty years of endeavor to equalize women's rights in the half-dead democracy of Afghanistan, the dream of equal rights for women in the Afghan society was destroyed by the arrival of the Taliban group. This group and its supporters have committed countless crimes during their rule in Afghanistan. In 2021, when this group comes to power, the women's experience of two decades ago will be repeated, and women will be deprived of their most basic rights. Like two decades ago, the Taliban removed the girls from social life by closing schools and imprisoning them at home. The recent actions of the Taliban against women include the following areas: exclusion from education, exclusion from work, exclusion from political activities, and restriction of activities in the public space, all these decrees and rulings against women's activities are from the source of Sharath and religious fatwas. The Taliban has been issued. In this research, we are looking at the influencing factors of the Taliban's thoughts on restricting the rights of women in the society of Afghanistan. In this research, we have compared the differences between the religious thoughts and beliefs of the Taliban, which are adapted from Islamic rulings, and the religious fatwa of the Taliban leaders with Islamic rulings.
Amnesty International (2014). 25 November, Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
Moghadam, V.M. (1997). ìNationalist Agendas and Women Rights: Conflicts in Afghanistan in the Twentieth Century.î in West, Lois A. (ed). Feminist Nationalism. New York: Routledge.
Reddy, C. S. (2014). Women in Afghanistan. World Affairs: The Journal of International Issues, 18(2), 124-143.
Azami, M.M. (1978). Studies in Hadith Methodology and Literature. American Trust Publications.
Ahmed, L. (1992). Women and gender in Islam. London: Yale University Press.
AL Zanati, M. (2000). Gender equity in Pharaonic Egypt, and forms of discrimination against women in Arab societies. Cairo: CDS.
Khan, M.V., & Khanam, F. (2009). The Quran translated, Good Word Books.
Rashid, A. (2000). Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia, New Haven: Yale University Press.
Yusufzai, R. (2001). A Question of Tolerance. News International, March 4.
Rashid, A. (2000). Taliban: Islam, Oil and the New Great Game in Central Asia, New York: I. B. Tauris.
One analyst has described the Taliban's government during the 1990s as "nominally interim." Whom Will Run the Taliban Government? (2021). International Crisis Group, September 9.
Women's rights in Afghanistan: Where Are We Now? (2021). United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, December.
Taliban urges government staff to return to work (2021). Ariana News, August 16.
Astor, M., Hassan, S., & Onishi, N. (2021). A Taliban spokesman urges women to stay home because fighters haven’t been trained to respect them. The New York Times, August 24.
Congressional Research Service (2021). Taliban Government in Afghanistan: Background and Issues for Congress, https://crsreports.congress.gov R46955
Hiam Salah EI-din Ali EI-Louis, November 2010, Women's Rights in Islam and Contemporary Ulama: Limitations and Constraints. (Egypt as Case Study) published in British the University of Leeds School of Modem Languages and Cultures
Orakzai, S.B. (2017). The rights of women in Islam: The question of ‘public’ and ‘private’ spheres for women’s rights and empowerment in Muslim societies, University of New England, Australia Visiting Fellow, School of Advanced Study, University of London (2017)
Statement on the Status of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission AIHRC (2021), September.
The Situation of Human Rights in Afghanistan (2021). Annual report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and reports of the Office of the High Commissioner and the Secretary-Genera, 28 February–1 April.
Mukhtar, A. (2021), Taliban declares women "free," but rights activists see little cause to celebrate. CBS News, December 6.
France24, (2021), Afghan women, girls fear to return to 'dark days' as Taliban enter Kabul.