Site icon Africa Global Village

Statement by Principals of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee on Afghanistan, Women’s participation in aid delivery must continue

The decision by Afghanistan’s de facto authorities to ban women from working in humanitarian nongovernmental organizations is a major blow for vulnerable communities, for women, for children, and for the entire country.

Female staff are key to
every aspect of the humanitarian response in Afghanistan. They are
teachers, nutrition experts, team leaders, community health workers,
vaccinators, nurses, doctors, and heads of organizations. They have
access to populations that their male colleagues cannot reach and are
critical to safeguarding the communities we serve. They save lives.
Their professional expertise is indispensable. Their participation in aid delivery is not negotiable and must continue.

Banning women from
humanitarian work has immediate life-threatening consequences for all
Afghans. Already, some time-critical programmes have had to stop
temporarily due to lack of female staff. This comes at a time when more
than 28 million people in Afghanistan, including millions of women and
children, require assistance to survive as the country grapples with the
risk of famine conditions, economic decline, entrenched poverty and a
brutal winter.

While humanitarian organizations continue to engage the de facto
authorities, we cannot ignore the operational constraints now facing us
as a humanitarian community. We will endeavour to continue lifesaving,
time-critical activities unless impeded while we better assess the
scope, parameters and consequences of this directive for the people we
serve. But we foresee that many activities will need to be paused as we
cannot deliver principled humanitarian assistance without female aid
workers.

We remain resolute in our
commitment to deliver independent, principled, lifesaving assistance to
all the women, men and children who need it. 

We urge the de facto
authorities to reconsider and reverse this directive, and all
directives banning women from schools, universities and public life. No
country can afford to exclude half of its population from contributing
to society.

Signatories

Source WHO

Exit mobile version