Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
A line of beauticians working with their customers at a beauty salon in Kabul, Afghanistan
Customers and workers at a beauty salon in Kabul, Afghanistan. The Taliban says such places must close in one month. Photograph: Rahmat Gul/AP
Customers and workers at a beauty salon in Kabul, Afghanistan. The Taliban says such places must close in one month. Photograph: Rahmat Gul/AP

Taliban order closure of beauty salons in Afghanistan

This article is more than 1 year old

Morality ministry decrees another reduction of Afghan women’s access to public spaces

The Taliban administration in Afghanistan has ordered beauty salons to close within a month, the morality ministry said, in the latest shrinking of access to public places for Afghan women.

“The deadline for the closing of beauty parlours for women is one month,” Mohammad Sadiq Akif, a spokesperson for the Ministry for the Prevention of Vice and Propagation of Virtue, said on Tuesday, referring to a ministry notice.

Foreign governments and UN officials have condemned growing restrictions on women since the Taliban returned to power in 2021 after defeating a US-backed government as foreign forces withdrew.

Last year, authorities closed most girls’ secondary schools, barred women from university and stopped many female Afghan aid staff from working. Many public places including bathhouses, gyms and parks have been closed to women.

Beauty salons sprang up in Kabul and other Afghan cities in the months after the Taliban were driven from power in late 2001, weeks after the September 11 attacks on the US.

Many remained open after the Taliban returned to power two years ago, providing some women with jobs and their customers with their services. The salons are usually female-only and have their windows covered so that customers cannot be seen from outside.

Sahar, a Kabul resident who visited a salon every few weeks to get her hair and nails done, said she felt that a final avenue for socialising safely outside had now been cut off.

“Parks are not allowed for women so it was a good place for us to meet our friends … it was a good reason to see each other, to meet other women, other girls to talk about issues,” she said, asking that her full name not be published for security reasons.

“Now I don’t know how to meet them, how to see them, how to talk to each other … I think it will be very impactful for us and women around Afghanistan,” she said.

Western governments and international organisations have signalled that restrictions on women are hampering any possible progress to international recognition for the Taliban administration.

The administration says it respects women’s rights in accordance with its interpretation of Islamic law and Afghan customs.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Four British men freed by Taliban after being held in Afghanistan

  • Taliban ban women from national park in Afghanistan

  • Gordon Brown calls for Taliban to face crimes against humanity charges

  • Tory MPs try to oust Tobias Ellwood from defence role for praising Taliban

  • UN ready for ‘heartbreaking’ decision to pull out of Afghanistan

  • UN tells Afghan staff to stay home after Taliban ban on female workers

  • UN concern after its female workers are ‘banned’ from working by Taliban

  • Taliban holding three British men in detention in Afghanistan

  • Female radio station in Afghanistan closed for playing music during Ramadan

  • Taliban governor known for fighting Islamic State killed in suicide attack

Most viewed

Most viewed

  翻译: