Thousands Rally for Afghan Women

Demonstrators in Italy call for international pressure on Taliban
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Sep 25, 2021 3:40 PM CDT
Rallies Seek Support for Afghan Women
A banner reading "with Afghan women" is seen as an Afghan refugee, who denied to give her name for safety reasons, delivers her speech during a demonstration in favor of Afghan women's rights, staged by women rights activists, in Rome, Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021.   (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Thousands of people demonstrated in cities across Italy on Saturday to support Afghan women and demand continued international pressure on the country's Taliban leaders to let women participate in the educational and political life of the country. Among the groups organizing the protests were members of the Pangea Foundation, which had worked for 20 years on economic development projects for Afghan women before finding itself helping to evacuate them when the Taliban took over, the AP reports.

At the protest Saturday, Pangea supporters had a "P" drawn on their hands. It was the same P that Afghan women wrote on their hands to be recognized at the Kabul airport and evacuated during the chaotic weeks as Western nations ended their military missions. "We must continue to put pressure so that women can participate not only in education but also in the politics of their country," Simona Lanzoni, vice president of Pangea, said during the Rome protest. "And then we must continue perhaps the humanitarian evacuations in a specific way, thinking first of all of those women who were not able to enter the airport in August but today are really risking in Afghanistan."

The event with the slogan ”#Nonlasciamolesole ("Let's not abandon them") brought out crowds in several Italian cities, where speakers called for a permanent observatory on women's rights in Afghanistan at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and at the United Nations. The UN heard a similar message Friday, per the Voice of America. "Don't let the Taliban's oppression be normalized," Shaharzad Akbar, chair of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, said in a virtual UN event. "Don't pretend that it is part of Afghan culture or part of Islam—our religion—to have women oppressed and deprived of their basic human rights." (Female municipal workers in Kabul were told men will take over most of their jobs.)

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