CONTENTS PAGE;
1. Opening statement
2. Taliban rule
(How they rule, who is in power and the government methods.)
3. Treatment of marginalised groups under the Taliban rule
(The treatment of women and children.)
4. Implication of Taliban rule on Afghan society
(Deprivation of; liberty, poverty, health and education.)
5. Closing statement
6. Reference list
Opening statement;
Afghanistan consists of mostly infertile surroundings and is isolated from the rest of central Asia. The governing group, The Taliban, have been at war within the area from 1978 to the present day. The Taliban is a cruel and unjust militia organisation that implements the tactics of segregation and oppression, specifically against women and children.
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As a result of the poverty rate, numerous people have to sell their belongings in markets or on streets. Many shops and stalls are run by women before the Taliban took control and enforced segregated laws upon the movements of women, therefore decreasing the economic structure and leading the country deeper into poverty
3.2
The limited access to doctors and medical help makes it extremely common for Afghans to become dreadfully sick either physically or mentally. The medical help that was available would have had a substantial payment fee which ‘common people’ would not have been able to afford due to the low state of economy and high degree of poverty.
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As well as it being quite secluded, the safety of this area is not only of a very low standard but is risking the lives of every single person inhabiting the area. If the Taliban is to continue leading this country, the religion and history of the area will be long forgotten, the economic structure will continue to fall and many more people will be sacrificed to the Taliban vicious ways. If the citizens of this region aren’t helped, the future of a single, fast-vanishing culture will be non-existent and in its place will grow an army of cruel and cold
The Taliban had a large number of restrictions placed on the rights of Afghan women. They were not allowed to work anywhere outside of their home. This meant that a woman could not be a professional in any type of job. Women also could not deal with any male shopkeeper or doctors.
For over 2 centuries, Afghanistan has known virtually no time without war. Beginning around 326 B.C. with the conquests of Alexander the Great, to the Persians, British, Russians and most recently, America and our NATO allies, Afghanistan has been cultivated into the country that it is today through a trial by fire. Regardless of this relentless onslaught of foreign military power, the Afghan people have tirelessly defended their homeland with no outside power ever being able to subdue them completely. Following the withdrawal of the Soviet Union in 1989, the country fell into civil war, torn even further apart by fiercely dedicated tribal warlords. This power vacuum led to the rise of a group called the Taliban. Led by a one eyed man
The beginning of an Islāmic group started to take over Afghanistan in 1996, after the Soviet Union left Afghanistan. This group is known as the Taliban. The Taliban’s mission is to make an Islāmic government in Afghanistan. The Taliban started with Islāmic students from Pakistan. Then in “September 1996 the Taliban seized control of Kabul (Afghanistan’s capital) and carried out a strict interpretation or explanation of Islāmic Law”(Hayes NP). The Taliban killed the Afghan president, Mohammed Najibullah in Kabul. That is when the Taliban took over Afghanistan. The Taliban controlled 95% of Afghanistan. Then once the Taliban had taken over Afghanistan, they started announcing their restrictions, that were harsh against women.
The land in Afghanistan is mountainous. Jagged, impassable ranges divide the country and make travel much more difficult. Due to these physical divisions, the people are extremely provincial,
Afghanistan has been for years a country struggling with authority issues. These struggles date back to the 16th century of the Mughal Empire and continues with the Taliban today. These historic struggles are responsible of the changing nature of political authority in this volatile region of our world. There have been many attempts from other groups to try and “conquer” the land but
The Taliban founded in the year of 1994 by a man named Mullah Mohammad Omar. It originated in Afghanistan and was created with the purpose of destroying the foreign military in Afghanistan and to reestablish the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan under strict Sharia Law ("Taliban Narrative"). The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan would then be brought back into play in the year of 1996. However, the event that led to the creation of the Taliban happened almost a decade earlier in the year of 1979. In 1979 the Soviets began invading Afghanistan, they were there for about ten years and then withdrew late in the year of 1988 and early 1989. Mujahedeen forces then removed the soviet government in the year of 1992 and led to rivalry between groups. A year
The Taliban, also known as The Afghan Taliban, is a terrorist organization that occupies large areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Taliban rose to power after the Soviet Union withdrew in 1989. By 1996, an extremist group by the name The Taliban had established themselves, enforcing a rather strict and brutal for of Sharia law. This was the beginning of what would seem to be a lifetime of horror for much of Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as the United States and the United Nations.
The Taliban told women, “You will stay inside your homes at all times…If you go outside, you must be accompanied by a mahram, a male relative” (Hosseini 248). On top of that, “Girls [were] forbidden from attending school. All schools for girls [were] closed immediately” (Hosseini
The Taliban is an extremist Islamic group highly emphasizing a strong interpretation of sharia law that arose in the early 1990s after the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Referencing the BBC article, a common belief holds that the Taliban first emerged in religious seminaries that preached a hard line of Sunni Islam. The Taliban’s promise to Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the surrounding area was to restore peace and security using their interpretation of the sharia law once they were in power (“Who Are the Taliban?”). Along with the many new policies and regulations of society, there arose a new interpretation of the role of women in society. Women became very restricted and had to live in a way that was extremely submissive to men to the point where it was almost dehumanizing, as many would argue. Although the Taliban has been out of control in Afghanistan since December of 2001, remnants of their oppression towards women remain. In this paper, I will demonstrate the Taliban’s remaining effects in Afghan society regarding many aspects of everyday life, such as the workforce, education, healthcare, and human rights. To begin, I will give a brief overview of how Afghan women participated in society before the Taliban came to power. I will then provide information and examples that shed light on women’s life during Taliban rule. In the final section of this paper, I will describe how the lifestyle of women has changed as a result of the Taliban’s oppressive laws and
The Taliban is one of the largest Islamic terrorist organizations in the world, which was founded on 10/10/94. The Taliban held Osama Bin Laden Al-Qaeda’s leader. The Afghan war was the U.S.’s response for the 9/11 attack. They wanted to liberate Afghanistan and stop Osama by any means possible.
The Taliban is an Islamic fundamentalist group that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 until 2001 (Laub). They have impacted the culture in Afghanistan as well as many other aspects of it. The Taliban has certain values that they want to be enforced in Afghanistan. These values have changed since 1996 when they first took control of the country. The Taliban took control after they drove the soviets out from their country. During the time they ruled Afghanistan, they changed several aspects of daily life and imposed several conservative Muslim beliefs. Some effects of their rule are still seen in modern day Afghanistan. They are still trying to take back control over their country and drive Western ideas out. Some aspects of life the Taliban changed
I don't like this being told what to do, when too do it and how. I am to scared to go outside the Taliban, they're always watching you. I know what they did to Father and I don't want that for me.
They are sneaking across borders and into different countries to do whatever they can to take the lives of many, and anything worth making headlines to get their message across to the world. "We have heard how they lock the people of entire villages inside their houses and burn them to the ground and how they slaughter men like goats, splitting them open and leaving their blood to soak in the ground" (Staples 12). These terrible people are doing horrible things to these innocent civilians, by taking over their villages and the lives of those who lived there. The survivors are left on their own and to fight for themselves. The way the Taliban had taken away Najmah’s family was that they had bombed her home, but Najmah was luckily able to escape. “My mother lies on the ground nearby with her legs splayed at odd angles to the rest of her. She reaches her hand toward me, and opens her lips to speak. Instead of speaking words, blood pours from her mouth” (Staples 67). Imagine having to see your mother like this with what you had just witnessed on top of it. “By the time I reach her she stares with glassy, dead eyes. Habib lies motionless a few feet behind her, facedown in the dirt, his little arms flung out to his sides in the way he throws them wide when he lies naked on the cot swimming for joy in the fresh air” (Staples 67). By this
The Taliban started in the 1990’s as a resistance to the soviets rule of Afghanistan. The movement promised to stabilize Afghanistan and introduce a new era of law that would end conflict. This attracted many people to the movement, causing it to expand exponentially. In September, 1996, the Taliban took control of Kabul and started the official rule of Afghanistan. “The Taliban regime controlled some 90 percent of the country before its 2001 overthrow, analysts say” from Council on Foreign Relations. The Taliban ruled most of Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. Their rule included ideas such as restoring peace, disarming the population, and defending the Islamic character. They wanted to create the world's most pure Islamic regime possible. This
The Taliban took over the country in terms of the composition of society, such as education, mosques, religions, and shrines (Spindlove & Simonsen, 2013). This group transformed Afghanistan and made it function how they wanted it to. The Taliban began to take over during Afghanistan’s civil war (Spindlove & Simonsen, 2013). This group eventually became involved in the drug trade in order to generate revenue to support itself (Spindlove & Simonsen, 2013). They provided training sanctions where propaganda also took place for soldiers who were not from Afghanistan (Spindlove & Simonsen, 2013). The Taliban was in charge of the military operations throughout Afghanistan and conducting terrorist attacks (Spindlove & Simonsen, 2013). It is known that