It is a bad time for girls in the Middle East and south-central Asia, with concerning reports from Iraq and Afghanistan in recent days.
In Afghanistan, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has just reported that 1.4 million girls there have been “deliberately denied” education beyond the age of 12.
Together with the girls not in education before the Taliban retook control of the country in 2021, the UN body says there are now 2.5 million Afghan girls not being schooled. This equates to four in every five girls throughout the land.
When it seized power in August 2021, the Taliban said: “We will allow women to study and work within our framework. Women will be very active in our society.” It now says educating girls after the age of 12 is inconsistent with their version of Islam.
Iraqi religious law
Meanwhile, in Iraq, the ruling Shiite coalition is advancing an amendment to the country’s Personal Status Law that would delegate matters of marriage and inheritance to religious law, rather than state law as is currently the case.
For 65 years, Iraq’s personal status law has applied to all Iraqis, without sectarian distinction. The current minimum marriage age, for instance, is 18. This is to prevent marriage contracts outside the courts.