Malala deplores 'gender apartheid' against women under Taliban regime in Afghanistan

Nobel laureate calls for gender-based apartheid to be declared "crimes against humanity"

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AFP
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Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai delivers the 21st Nelson Mandela Annual Peace Lecture on the tenth anniversary of his death, in Johannesburg, South Africa on December 5, 2023. — Reuters
Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai delivers the 21st Nelson Mandela Annual Peace Lecture on the tenth anniversary of his death, in Johannesburg, South Africa on December 5, 2023. — Reuters 

  • Malala calls the Afghan Taliban regime a "gender apartheid".
  • Urges gender-based inequity be made "crime against humanity".
  • Girlhood made "illegal" by Taliban rule in war-torn Afghanistan.


Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai Tuesday deplored the discrimination against women under the Taliban rule in Afghanistan saying that mere girlhood has been made illegal in the war-torn country.

"Our first imperative is to call the regime in Afghanistan what it really is. It is a gender apartheid," Malala said during her keynote address at the event organised by the Mandela Foundation marking the 10th anniversary of the death of Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Calling for discriminatory and apartheid policies to be declared a "crime against humanity", the global girls education activist said: "The Taliban have made girlhood illegal, and it is taking a toll."

She went on to underscore that teenage girls and women are barred from schools and universities and are also not allowed to enter public places such as parks, gyms and funfairs.

Malala said thousands of women have lost their government jobs — or are being paid to stay home.

Stressing the inclusion of gender apartheid as a crime against humanity, Malala said: "South Africans fought for racial apartheid to be recognised and criminalised at the international level. In the process, they drew more of the world’s attention to the horrors of apartheid [...] But gender apartheid has not been explicitly codified yet."

"We have an opportunity to do that right now," she also said while calling for the definition of gender apartheid to be included in a new UN treaty that is currently under work with former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other leading activists campaigning for the cause as well.

The Nobel laureate also condemned the "unjust bombardment" of the beleaguered Gaza Strip by the Israeli forces noting that the Middle East crisis — along with the situation in Ukraine and Sudan — has diverted the world's attention from the maltreatment of women and girls in Afghanistan.