Taliban Reopens Afghan Public Universities For Female Students With Strict Rules

Public universities in Afghanistan have reopened after being closed for nearly nine months. Universities in warmer provinces reopened for the first time since the Taliban seized power in August.

The Taliban have imposed several restrictions, many of them on women, since their takeover. High schools were reopened only for boys. Girls were not allowed to attend classes at that time. However, now universities and high schools are open for women and girls.

The media were refused permission by the Taliban authorities to cover the universities’ opening ceremonies in Kandahar and Helmand provinces in Afghanistan. Reportedly, universities in Laghman, Nangarhar, Kandahar, Nimroz, Farah, and Helmand provinces opened on Wednesday for female students. Female students were asked to follow the Islamic dress code while attending classes.

Reportedly, students in Kandahar said that they were not optimistic about the future under the strict restrictions imposed on women since the Taliban takeover. One small group of women, wearing full-body veils, entered Laghman University on Wednesday. Khalida Rashed, an economics student, said there was concern about the low numbers of female students. She said that she is happy that colleges reopened after nine months. However, she asked, “Will the Taliban allow them to work after graduation?” Some students were sad as many of their fellow students fled from Afghanistan when the Taliban seized power in August.

Reportedly, men will attend classes in the morning and women in the afternoon, aligning with a gender-segregated system under the Taliban authorities. Abdul Baqi Haqqani, the Taliban-appointed education minister, said that the University of Kabul would reopen for both men and women on February 26. Other universities in the southern provinces of Zabul and Uruzgan will remain shut till February 25.

According to the former Afghan government’s education ministry, 10 percent of Kandahar University’s 12,000 students were women before the Taliban takeover.

Rajesh Journalist

Recent Posts

Why the 2026 Federal Funding Lapse Feels Like a Routine, Not a Crisis

The U.S. federal government entered a partial shutdown 2026 at midnight Jan 31 after Congress missed the FY2026 budget deadline,… Read More

January 31, 2026

AI‑Made Movies Are Here: Why 2026 Could Be the Year ‘Real’ Directors Start Losing Jobs

AI-made movies explode in 2026, with Sundance premieres like WINK and MythOS using Adobe Firefly genAI for workflows, slashing VFX/postproduction… Read More

January 31, 2026

The UAE: Architecting the Future as a Global AI Powerhouse

United Arab Emirates has become one of the leading countries of the world in terms of Artificial Intelligence because of… Read More

January 31, 2026

Grammys 2026: Why Trevor Noah’s Hosting Signals a New Era of Pop‑Culture Politics

Trevor Noah returns for his sixth and final Grammys 2026 hosting gig on February 1 at Crypto.com Arena, marking CBS's… Read More

January 31, 2026

“Real ID, Real Backlash: How America’s Airport Rules Are Testing Civil Liberties”

Real ID  enforcement began May 7, 2025 and required compliant domestic United States flights to have driver licenses or passports,… Read More

January 31, 2026

Beyond the Blast: The European Movement to Designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a Terrorist Organization

The European political arena has witnessed a decisive movement as there is a mounting movement to officially declare the Muslim… Read More

January 31, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More