Gender Apartheid is a Crime Against Humanity
The Taliban’s War on Women
Convinced that their interpretation of Islam is the only legitimate one, Afghanistan’s Taliban leaders continue to issue decrees that strip the country’s women and girls of their rights and freedoms. Their latest edict bans Afghan women – already prohibited from speaking in public – from praying aloud or reciting the Quran in the presence of other women.
“When women are not permitted to call takbir (Allahu akbar) or azan (the Islamic call to prayer), they certainly cannot sing songs or music,” declared Mohammad Khalid Hanafi, the minister for the propagation of virtue and prevention of vice.
Just months ago, there was some hope that the Taliban might ease its restrictions on women and girls’ education. Instead, the regime seems intent on entrenching its gender apartheid system.
The Need for International Action
In response, Richard Bennett, the United Nations special rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan – who remains barred from entering the country – has launched a review of the Taliban’s repressive policies, calling its latest decree a “pivotal moment.”
Meanwhile, the UN’s Sixth Committee (Legal) recently approved a draft global treaty targeting crimes against humanity. As many human-rights groups, including Amnesty International, have argued, this treaty, which will be the subject of further discussion in January 2026, must recognize and codify gender apartheid as a crime under international law. Such a designation would represent a historic step towards ending the systemic discrimination, oppression, and subjugation of women and girls in Afghanistan, Iran, and beyond.
The Consequences of Gender Apartheid
The Taliban’s gender apartheid underscores the urgent need to confront this profound moral failure. Over the past three years, the regime has denied Afghan girls and young women access to schools and universities, barred women from most forms of employment, prohibited them from traveling without a male chaperone, and excluded them from most public spaces. It also enforces a draconian dress code requiring women to wear burqas that cover them from head to toe.
In August, the Taliban intensified its efforts to silence women, banning them from singing, reciting, and speaking in public. During multilateral negotiations in Doha earlier this year, Afghan women and women’s groups were excluded, while the regime refused to acknowledge their plight.
A Path Forward
Despite these restrictions, Afghan girls – many of whom were already in school when the Taliban returned to power in 2021 – continue to dream of becoming doctors, nurses, teachers, engineers, and entrepreneurs. At great risk to themselves and their families, some attend underground schools, participate in local home-schooling initiatives, or pursue remote learning. A few have managed to leave the country to study abroad. But these efforts fall far short of bridging the gap between the number of girls entitled to an education under international law and those who receive one.
The oppression of Afghan women has had far-reaching – and devastating – consequences. According to a recent UN Women report, child marriage has increased by 25%, owing partly to girls’ exclusion from secondary education. Mental distress, depression, and suicide attempts have also soared, and the risk of maternal mortality has surged by at least 50%, fueled by a rise in childbirth deaths among young girls.
The International Community’s Response
Encouragingly, the international community has made progress in mobilizing a legal response to the Taliban’s oppressive policies. In March 2023, prominent Afghan jurists and women’s rights advocates launched the End Gender Apartheid campaign, calling for its recognition as an international crime. Building on this momentum, the UN Working Group on Discrimination Against Women and Girls recommended including gender apartheid in the draft treaty on crimes against humanity. And during the April 2024 session of the UN’s legal committee on draft articles, several member states expressed support for its inclusion.
Conclusion
The proposed definition of gender apartheid as “inhumane acts committed within the context of an institutionalised regime of systematic discrimination, oppression, and domination by one group over another or others, based on gender, and committed with the intention of maintaining that regime” encompasses violations of fundamental human rights, such as access to education, healthcare, and employment, as well as freedom of expression, assembly, and participation in political, social, economic, and cultural life.
The international community must make it clear that it will not normalise relations with the Taliban until the regime ends its war on women. Notably, Qatar – which has long acted as a mediator between the Taliban and the West – has condemned the Taliban’s policies, as has Saudi Arabia. The United Arab Emirates has gone further, denouncing Afghanistan’s ban on girls’ education as a violation of “the teachings of Islam” that “must be swiftly reversed.” Now, Muslim-majority countries should lead the effort to bring a case against Afghanistan before the International Court of Justice for violating the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
FAQs
* What is gender apartheid?
Gender apartheid is a system of institutionalised discrimination, oppression, and domination by one group over another or others, based on gender.
* Why is gender apartheid a crime against humanity?
Gender apartheid is a violation of fundamental human rights, including access to education, healthcare, and employment, as well as freedom of expression, assembly, and participation in political, social, economic, and cultural life.
* What is the proposed definition of gender apartheid?
The proposed definition of gender apartheid as “inhumane acts committed within the context of an institutionalised regime of systematic discrimination, oppression, and domination by one group over another or others, based on gender, and committed with the intention of maintaining that regime”.
* What is the international community’s response to the Taliban’s oppressive policies?
The international community has made progress in mobilizing a legal response, including the launch of the End Gender Apartheid campaign, the recommendation to include gender apartheid in the draft treaty on crimes against humanity, and the condemnation of the Taliban’s policies by several countries, including Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.