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Home » Taliban urged to lift female aid worker restrictions following devastating earthquakes – UK Times
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Taliban urged to lift female aid worker restrictions following devastating earthquakes – UK Times

By uk-times.com8 September 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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On The Ground newsletter: Get a weekly dispatch from our international correspondents

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On The Ground

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has urged Taliban authorities to lift restrictions on Afghan female aid workers, allowing them to travel without male guardians and assist women struggling to access care after a powerful earthquake killed 2,200 people in eastern Afghanistan.

The plea comes as the country grapples with the aftermath of the 1 September magnitude 6 quake, which injured more than 3,600 and left thousands homeless.

Dr Mukta Sharma, the deputy representative of WHO’s Afghanistan office, highlighted the critical need, telling Reuters: “A very big issue now is the increasing paucity of female staff in these places.”

She estimated around 90 per cent of medical staff in the area were male, with the remaining 10 per cent often midwives and nurses, rather than doctors. This disparity means women are uncomfortable or afraid to interact with male staff and travel alone to receive care.

Afghanistan has already been facing severe aid cuts and humanitarian crises since the Taliban assumed control in 2021.

The Afghan health ministry and a spokesperson for the Taliban administration did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A boy stands in front of houses damaged by a deadly earthquake that struck Afghanistan's Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, at Masud village in Nurgal district, Kunar province

A boy stands in front of houses damaged by a deadly earthquake that struck Afghanistan’s Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, at Masud village in Nurgal district, Kunar province (Reuters)

The Taliban maintains it respects women’s rights in line with its interpretation of Islamic law and has previously said they would ensure women could receive aid.

Its administration in 2022 ordered Afghan female NGO staff to stop working outside the home. Humanitarian officials say there have been exemptions, particularly in the health and education sectors, but many said these were patchwork and not sufficient to allow a surge of female staff, particularly in an emergency situation that required travel.

That meant aid organisations and female staff faced uncertainty, Sharma said, and in some cases were not able to take the risk.

“The restrictions are huge, the mahram (male guardian requirements) issue continues and no formal exemption has been provided by the de facto authorities,” she said, adding her team had raised the issue with authorities last week.

“That’s why we felt we had to advocate with (authorities) to say, this is the time you really need to have more female health workers present, let us bring them in, and let us search from other places where they’re available.”

Sharma said she was extremely concerned about women in the future being able to access mental health care to deal with trauma, as well as for those whose male family members had been killed, leaving them to navigate restrictions on women without a male guardian.

Afghans injured in a powerful earthquake that struck eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, lie on beds at Nangarhar Regional Hospital in Jalalabad, Afghanistan

Afghans injured in a powerful earthquake that struck eastern Afghanistan on Sunday, lie on beds at Nangarhar Regional Hospital in Jalalabad, Afghanistan (Associated Press)

Peer Gul from Somai district in Kunar province, which was severely hit by the quakes, said many women from his village had experienced trauma and high blood pressure after the earthquake and were struggling to reach medical care.

“There is no female doctor for examinations; only one male doctor is available,” he said.

Sharma noted the growing shortage of Afghan female doctors as the Taliban have barred female students from high school and university, meaning a pipeline of women doctors was not being replenished.

The UN estimates around 11,600 pregnant women were also impacted by the quakes in a country with some of the highest maternal mortality rates in Asia.

Funding cuts, including by the US administration this year, had already left the health system reeling. Around 80 health facilities had already closed in the affected areas this year due to US aid cuts and another 16 health posts had to be shuttered due to damage from the earthquake, Sharma said.

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