Political Participation Network: Violence against Afghan women is a structural and social crisis

The statement notes that girls and women in Afghanistan face deprivation from education, work, and social participation, and mothers who lose hope for their children's future amid restrictions and insecurity continue to fall victim to systematic violence.


The Afghanistan Women's Political Participation Network has emphasized that these forms of violence are neither accidental nor hidden, but organized and structural.


The network states that no woman should be deprived of education, work, freedom, dignity, and security due to her gender, and it considers the restrictions imposed on women as a clear manifestation of gender-based violence. Humiliation, censorship, exclusion, and restrictions on freedom of movement and expression are among the most significant forms of structural violence that threaten the continued existence of society.


The Afghanistan Women's Political Participation Network concluded its statement by clarifying that the end of the 16 Days campaign does not mean the end of efforts, and the voice of Afghan women will not be silenced. The network has committed to bringing the narratives of Afghan women and girls to the world's attention and to persistently and responsibly strive for their access to justice, education, and social participation.

The Afghanistan Women's Political Participation Network, on the occasion of the global "16 Days of Activism to End Violence Against Women" campaign, announced in a statement that violence against women in the country is not merely an individual issue, but a profound social, structural, and political crisis that has impacted the lives of millions of women and girls in Afghanistan.

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