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For years the Taliban told women to cover up in public. Now they're cracking down [Afghanistan]
npr ^ | February 20, 20268:14 AM ET | Fariba Akbari , Diaa Hadid

Posted on 02/20/2026 6:52:02 AM PST by BenLurkin

In stop-start efforts since November, Taliban officials have cracked down on women and girls in the western city of Herat who have been ignoring the hardline group's rules by showing their faces. Enforcement agents are preventing them from entering hospitals and seminaries and pulling them out of public transport.

Initially, women and girls were punished for not wearing a burka — the Afghan burka is typically blue, has a netted opening for the eyes and drapes down around the body, largely constraining the woman wearing it. Later, after what residents described as pushback, officials enforcing the rules relented and allowed women to wear the typical conservative dress in this part of Afghanistan, a voluminous cloak known as a chaddar, along with a face mask.

At the main hospital in the Western city of Herat, one health worker described female staff milling outside the entryway for hours, waiting for colleagues on the night shift to hand over their burkas so they could enter — like a token that allowed them "entry permission," the worker said. In another incident, Human Rights Watch reported on a female surgeon, who was detained for several hours for not donning the burka.

Forcing women to don burkas, to cover their faces or even to wear a hijab, or head covering, "is part of the Taliban's policy of controlling women's bodies to make women invisible," said Sahar Fetrat, a researcher in the women's rights division of Human Rights Watch. She said in a statement: "Afghan women and United Nations human rights experts have called this "gender apartheid."

In interviews conducted since November, more than a dozen Herat residents described different incidents to NPR. They all requested anonymity, or that we only use an initial of their first names, fearing reprisal from Taliban officials. The crackdown was run by officials of the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, which is tasked with the implementation of the Taliban's interpretation of Islamic law.

The crackdown was ostensibly for women and girls to follow an edict issued in May 2022 by the Taliban that effectively gave two options to women and girls who had reached puberty: they could wear a burka — or a black robe, headscarf, face veil and gloves, leaving only a slit for the eyes. Women's male guardians — their fathers, husbands, brothers or sons — were made responsible for enforcing those rules and were threatened with punishment if their female relatives did not obey. That was followed by more detailed rules issued in August 2024 that fleshed out the earlier edict, known as the Law on the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. Women have been detained and even held for days in lockups for violating those rules — but they are implemented haphazardly.

"The enforcement of vice and virtue rules appears to move in waves — periods of intensified clamping down on rulebreakers in a given location followed by an easing of pressure," said Kate Clark, co-director and senior analyst of Afghanistan Analysts Network, which authored a report focusing on the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice in December.

"These shifts can occur after a change of governor or a public backlash, or for some other unfathomable reason: people are not always sure what sparked Amr bil-Maruf to crack down — or relent," she said, referring to the ministry by its local name.

It wasn't clear why agents of the ministry for the prevention of vice and promotion of virtue decided, in early November, to fan out across Herat's government departments, schools and health facilities to check on the dress of women and girls.

The city, which lies near the border with Iran, is comparatively more liberal than others in Afghanistan. Before the Taliban seized power in August 2021, some women and girls participated in football teams, volleyball teams and chess clubs. They were a common sight in academic institutions.

NPR sought comment from officials of the Islamic Emirate, as the Taliban formally describe themselves but did not receive a response.

As part of the crackdown, in early November, agents tasked with imposing the writ of the vice and virtue ministry posted themselves at the gates of the Herat Regional Hospital, a government-run facility where the poorest Afghans seek treatment.

There, one male medic and another male health worker, who both requested anonymity, told NPR that agents of the vice and virtue ministry prevented female patients and medical staff from entry unless they donned the burka.

The medic said the rule was hardest on the impoverished women, women who had scraped together "100 to 150 Afghanis to come to the hospital," roughly between $2.30 and $3. "And when they came to the hospital, they weren't allowed to enter."

And he described chaotic scenes, including the outer perimeter of the hospital crowded with female health workers. They were waiting for their female colleagues on the night shift to exit, and to hand over their burkas — so they could don them and enter the hospital. "Everyone was exchanging the burka," he said. "It was a kind of entry permission."

The medical charity Doctors Without Borders, which supports health care clinics around Afghanistan, reported a 28% drop in urgent admissions during the first few days after the vice ministry began its crackdown. The group said in a statement that the numbers ticked back up after a few days.

Vice agents were also posted around religious seminaries — the only avenue available for most women to seek education after the Taliban banned schooling for most women and girls after grade 6.

In one incident in late November, vice squad officials outside one seminary demanded teenage girls wear a burka. One 16-year-old student told NPR that the order led to a standoff outside the school, with girls refusing to leave. She requested anonymity because she'd been warned that she would be in trouble if she spoke to others about what happened at the seminary.

The teenage girls NPR spoke to said that several Taliban bureaucrats tried to defuse the situation, telling the vice squad agents, "Let the girls enter the school and we will explain the law to them." But, the 16-year-old says, the girls refused to enter and told the Taliban officials, "either repeal this law now or we will not enter this school."

The teenage girl says the Taliban officials became anxious, telling the girls that if they stayed on the road, "the shopkeepers will see you."

The teenager then told NPR that a few dozen girls "attacked the Taliban" — it appears they overwhelmed the five or six men posted at the seminary gates. The teenager says that after that, they were allowed into the seminary without burkas.

It was a win, the teenager said — to a degree: "We were told to wear a black niqab," referring to a face veil, "and gloves." That incident was corroborated by another teenager who requested her name not be used.

Within days of the crackdown, other Herat residents confirmed that the agents of the vice and virtue ministry also backed down on older women wearing the burka. Instead, they insisted women don a chaddar. And when one woman forgot to wear one while trying to get her sick mother to a hospital, she was stopped at a Taliban checkpoint and ordered to return home, according to a female medic who requested anonymity. The medic identified the woman as a friend of hers and said that "she wasn't allowed to move even though it was an emergency."

Policing of the rules spread to women in vehicles.

The male health worker who spoke to NPR on the condition of anonymity said agents of the vice and virtue ministry set up checkpoints to flag down vehicles to check what women inside were wearing. They ordered women to only sit in the back of shared minibuses, which operate as a privately run transport system.

The male health worker said that within days, women were banned from sitting in a shared minibus with men altogether. A female medic said that the ban immediately drove up the price for women to ride public transport, from about 50 cents a ride to $1.60 — because the shared minibuses had to factor in the losses they'd make by not allowing men to board. And, still, drivers sometimes refused, she said, because of the delays and scrutiny at Taliban checkpoints when they ferried women. "They check the women, they check their hijab," she said. They ask, she said, "Where is your male guardian? Where do you want to go?"

Two female health workers who requested anonymity, told NPR in separate interviews that they saw agents of the vice and virtue ministry detain women inside a large shipping-style container in a Herat square in the freezing cold for several hours in November. Their crime, according to the two women: they were only wearing headscarves and long coats — no chaddar.

The two female health workers told NPR that the restrictions on women entering a minibus with men, and the higher price for women to ride in an all-woman bus, meant they simply walked to their hospital jobs: about an hour's march each way. One worker told NPR: "I think they want women not to leave the house at all."


TOPICS: War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghan; afghanburka; afghanistan; bidenspeople; burka; islamofascism; islamofascists; koranimals; taliban; talibums; typicaloftheleft; women

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1 posted on 02/20/2026 6:52:02 AM PST by BenLurkin
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To: BenLurkin
…along with a face mask.

Yet another reason the left loves Islam.

2 posted on 02/20/2026 6:54:23 AM PST by Tell It Right (1 Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: BenLurkin

That will describe England in about two years.


3 posted on 02/20/2026 6:55:09 AM PST by bwest
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To: BenLurkin

We see that in Saudi Arabia during WWE events with the gargantuan ring gear the women wore in the WWE events, even the female referees have to wear long-sleeve undershirts that male referees do not have to wear.

And we’re seeing some days Fox News anchors dress that way now that the “Ailes rules” no longer exist.


4 posted on 02/20/2026 6:55:30 AM PST by WhiteHatBobby0701
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To: BenLurkin

A Handmaid’s Tale in real life


5 posted on 02/20/2026 6:56:23 AM PST by AppyPappy (They don't call you a Nazi because they think you are one. They do it to justify violence. )
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To: BenLurkin

Not my circus, not my monkeys. They had 20 years of our blood and treasure to fix their country. Embrace the suck!


6 posted on 02/20/2026 6:56:54 AM PST by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: Tell It Right

Grok executive summary:

The Taliban has intensified enforcement of strict Islamic dress codes in Herat since early November 2025, targeting women and girls who show their faces in public. Agents from the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice blocked entry to hospitals, seminaries, and public transport unless women wore full burqas (or later relaxed to chaddar cloaks with face masks after local pushback and resistance, including standoffs by teenage girls). This led to chaotic scenes—like female staff swapping burqas at hospital doors for “entry permission,” detained surgeons, a 28% drop in urgent medical admissions, higher transport costs for women-only rides, and detentions in freezing containers—effectively making women more invisible, restricting their access to healthcare and education, and pushing many to walk long distances or stay home under the regime’s ongoing gender apartheid policies.


7 posted on 02/20/2026 6:57:53 AM PST by jroehl (And how we burned in the camps later - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - The Gulag Archipelago)
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To: BenLurkin

I thought we conquered Afghanistan several years ago.


8 posted on 02/20/2026 6:59:17 AM PST by ComputerGuy
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To: BenLurkin

I was recently hospitalized in Somalisota and had a lab tech come to draw blood, wearing a full burka with only a meshed slit for her eyes. Even the photo her name badge showed her in a burka. I found it unnerving as clearly the burka restricts her vision and I have no idea who was drawing my blood. That same burka could be shared among other Somalis allowing them into the hospital and drawing blood without any training. If Muslim women wish to wear this sign of submission that’s their problem, but it is hardly appropriate wear for doing medical procedures.


9 posted on 02/20/2026 7:03:25 AM PST by The Great RJ
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To: BenLurkin

The U.S. should have armed and trained the ladies over there...they had something to fight for: their equality.


10 posted on 02/20/2026 7:04:24 AM PST by kawhill (Dywedwch Wrthym + Add translation Welsh-English dictionary 'Tell Us')
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To: BenLurkin

Well, I can’t wait to see the Hollywood feminist reaction to this tyranny.


11 posted on 02/20/2026 7:07:06 AM PST by budj (Combat Vet, second of three generations.)
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To: BenLurkin

The NOW Gang doesn’t seem to be too concerned about it, so why should I be concerned about it?


12 posted on 02/20/2026 7:08:01 AM PST by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: bwest

> That will describe England in about two years. <

Maybe not just in England. There is a Muslim rape problem in Oslo, Norway (and elsewhere, of course). In response, Norwegian authorities have suggested that Norwegian women dress more modestly.

It’s just a suggestion… for now.


13 posted on 02/20/2026 7:10:05 AM PST by Leaning Right (It's morning in America. Again.)
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To: dfwgator

My thoughts exactly.


14 posted on 02/20/2026 7:15:56 AM PST by No name given ( Anonymous is who you’ll know me as )
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To: budj

It’ll be crickets as usual.


15 posted on 02/20/2026 7:16:16 AM PST by No name given ( Anonymous is who you’ll know me as )
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To: BenLurkin

They also restrict the women from sitting on the curb of their street during recycling pickup days.


16 posted on 02/20/2026 7:26:22 AM PST by kvanbrunt2
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To: BenLurkin

Simply no concern of mine. Over three thousand brave young americans were killed, tens of thousands more were physically and psychologically mutilated in America’s futile, foolish effort to “nation build” and introduce Western values into this culturally alien place. The Afghans must be left to their own fate.


17 posted on 02/20/2026 7:28:16 AM PST by allendale
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To: allendale

18 posted on 02/20/2026 7:30:30 AM PST by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: dfwgator

“Forget it, Jake. It’s Afghanistan.”


19 posted on 02/20/2026 7:36:49 AM PST by atomic_dog
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To: ComputerGuy

I thought we conquered Afghanistan several years ago.


I get your sarcasm.

Afghanistan has been conquered many times, but its party trick is that it doesn’t stay conquered. The graveyard of empires.

We got out kind of easily. Read what happened to the British Army given ‘safe passage’ back to India in the first Anglo-Afghan war.


20 posted on 02/20/2026 7:37:12 AM PST by hanamizu
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