Taliban leader bans windows overlooking places 'usually used by women'
- The Taliban leader has banned windows overlooking places 'usually used by women' as part of new restrictions.
- Women in Afghanistan are facing increasing limitations on their freedoms under the Taliban regime.
- The Taliban regime has received criticism for its treatment of women in Afghanistan.
- The policy aims to control women's visibility in public spaces, which have become more segregated.
168 Articles
168 Articles
Taliban prohibits windows overlooking residential spaces occupied by women
Taliban Spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid announced on Saturday a controversial directive prohibiting the construction of windows in homes that overlook neighboring properties occupied by women. The decree imposes stringent restrictions on property owners, mandating that any newly constructed homes refrain from installing windows facing the courtyards or living spaces of adjacent residences where women reside. Furthermore, homeowners with existing…
The Taliban have banned its construction in rooms intended for women and have ordered that those that already exist be walled up. Only the latest in a series of measures that, since taking power in 2021, make life impossible for Afghan women.
Biden's Afghanistan: Taliban Bans Windows Near Places 'Used by Women'
The Taliban terrorist organization running Afghanistan published a decree this weekend banning buildings from having windows overlooking places "used by women," a measure to protect Afghans from potentially seeing a woman inside her own home. The post Biden’s Afghanistan: Taliban Bans Windows Near Places ‘Used by Women’ appeared first on Breitbart.
Taliban ban windows to prevent women’s ‘exposure’
KABUL: The Taliban rulers of Afghanistan have imposed a ban on the construction of windows that may allow the visibility of women in private spaces or could lead to the exposure of women in neighbouring houses. The new directive, which affects the design of buildings, was issued following a decree from the Taliban’s supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada. According to a statement from the Taliban’s spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid, the ban was pu…
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