TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「When the Taliban seized power in 1996, it waged a war against Afghan women. Girls’ education was banned. Women were confined to the home and denied the right to work. These are living memories for millions of Afghans, and they have become present concerns as U.S. government representatives negotiate with the Taliban about a settlement that could see it return to a position of power and influence in Afghanistan. Today, nearly a third of the Afghan parliament and civil service are women. Afghan women are professors, artists, journalists, lawyers and judges; they serve in the national police force and military. The nation’s ambassador to the U.S. is a woman. This progress is inspiring yet fragile: women and girls there still routinely face discrimination and violence. Women, who have the most to lose if the Taliban returns to power, currently have the least say in the process by which it may do so, writes Angelina Jolie, actor and co-founder of the Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict Initiative. While no one doubts the need for peace, Afghan women want to know that they won’t be betrayed, and their rights won’t be undermined by these negotiations. In this photo, women walk in the old section of Herat, Afghanistan on Jan.9, 2018. Photograph by Hoshang Hashimi—@afpphoto/@gettyimages」4月13日 1時01分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 4月13日 01時01分


When the Taliban seized power in 1996, it waged a war against Afghan women. Girls’ education was banned. Women were confined to the home and denied the right to work. These are living memories for millions of Afghans, and they have become present concerns as U.S. government representatives negotiate with the Taliban about a settlement that could see it return to a position of power and influence in Afghanistan. Today, nearly a third of the Afghan parliament and civil service are women. Afghan women are professors, artists, journalists, lawyers and judges; they serve in the national police force and military. The nation’s ambassador to the U.S. is a woman. This progress is inspiring yet fragile: women and girls there still routinely face discrimination and violence. Women, who have the most to lose if the Taliban returns to power, currently have the least say in the process by which it may do so, writes Angelina Jolie, actor and co-founder of the Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict Initiative. While no one doubts the need for peace, Afghan women want to know that they won’t be betrayed, and their rights won’t be undermined by these negotiations. In this photo, women walk in the old section of Herat, Afghanistan on Jan.9, 2018. Photograph by Hoshang Hashimi—@AFP通信/@gettyimages


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