Taliban bans Afghan women from praying aloud together
It's the latest restriction on women following morality laws that ban them from raising their voice and baring their faces outside the home
AP
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Audio of Hanafi's remarks was shared on the ministry's social media platforms but was later deleted.PHOTO:AP
Islamabad, 30
Oct
Afghan
women are forbidden from praying loudly or reciting the Quran in front of other
women, according to a Taliban government minister.
It's the
latest restriction on women following morality laws that ban them from raising
their voice and baring their faces outside the home. They are already excluded
from education after sixth grade, many public spaces and most jobs.
Nobody from
the Vice and Virtue Ministry was immediately available Wednesday to clarify the
official's remarks or confirm if the prohibition would also become part of the
morality laws.
During an
event in eastern Logar province on Sunday, Vice and Virtue Minister Khalid
Hanafi said: “It is prohibited for a grown woman to recite Quranic verses or
perform recitations in front of another grown woman. Even chants of takbir
(Allahu Akbar) are not permitted.”
He said
that uttering similar expressions like “subhanallah,” another word central to
the Islamic faith, was also not allowed. A woman was not permitted to perform
the call to prayer, he told the gathering. “So, there is certainly no
permission for singing.”
Audio of
Hanafi's remarks was shared on the ministry's social media platforms but was
later deleted.
The
ministry said Tuesday that a nationwide awareness programme about the laws is
underway involving ministry officials at provincial and district levels.
“Organising
such programmes will contribute to shaping public perception and increasing
awareness of divine rulings,” the ministry added.
Afghan
provinces are already barring the media from showing images of living things,
another controversial and widely criticised feature of the morality laws.
The Taliban
set up the ministry for the " propagation of virtue and the prevention of
vice” after seizing power in 2021.
Since then,
the ministry has enforced decrees issued by the Taliban leadership that have a
disproportionate impact on women and girls, like dress codes, segregated
education and employment, and having a male guardian when they travel.-AP
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