Off air: one by one, the Taliban are removing women's voices from Afghan radio
Source: The Guardian
Off air: one by one, the Taliban are removing womens voices from Afghan radio
As one of the last female-run stations in the country is silenced, a former broadcaster gives an inside view of the crackdown on women working in the media
Ruchi Kumar
Wed 19 Feb 2025 06.00 GMT
Last modified on Wed 19 Feb 2025 15.23 GMT
When the Taliban began marching towards cities across Afghanistan in the summer of 2021, Alia*, a 22-year-old Afghan journalist, found herself doing some of the most important work of her short life and career.
In the weeks leading up to the Taliban takeover in August, Alias voice on the radio became familiar to many in northern Afghanistan. She reported on the withdrawal of foreign troops, the siege of government offices and on the detention of former officials in her province.
Above all, Alia reported on the situation for women and their fears and concerns emotions she was experiencing herself. As the Taliban gradually began imposing restrictions on them, Alia was documenting history repeating itself.
I grew up with the history of the Talibans domination of women [during their first stint in power between 1996 and 2001] and a lot of my work focused on the impact such radical ideology has had on womens progress in Afghanistan, she says.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2025/feb/19/off-air-one-by-one-the-taliban-are-removing-womens-voices-from-afghan-radio