Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 12
Afghans Stage Rare Herat Protests Over Women's Rights as 2 Died in Earlier Unrest
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 12

Afghans Stage Rare Herat Protests Over Women's Rights as 2 Died in Earlier Unrest

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 12

Summary

  • Herat saw another rare public protest against Taliban restrictions on women on Friday, with demonstrators marching toward a government building and chanting “Women, Work and Freedom!”
  • Wide-ranging security measures followed after Tuesday’s Herat protests left 2 people dead — including a boy — and at least 20 injured, according to the United Nations.
  • Sayed Masoud Hussaini, a Herat police spokesman, denied reports of arrests or injuries among what he called “agitators,” contradicting witness accounts and the U.N.
  • Dozens of masked men and women had already gathered in a public square earlier this week, underscoring unusual open dissent in Herat, a relatively liberal city influenced by Hazara communities and returnees expelled from Iran.

Insights

Could protests in a historically liberal city like Herat ignite a nationwide movement against Taliban rule?
As the world debates 'gender apartheid,' can street protests by Afghan women actually force change from the Taliban?
In a nation facing mass starvation, why are women risking death to protest for education and freedom?