The Afghan Interior Ministry has announced that the girls will soon be able to return to secondary school.

Spokesman for interior ministry," All schools and universities in Afghanistan will reopen in a very short time.

Saeed Khosty, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, told Al Jazeera on Sunday that the exact time will be announced by the Education Ministry. 

"According to my understanding and information,  all  universities and schools will be reopened in a short time and all  girls and women will return to school and teaching," he said. 

Since taking power, the Taliban has only allowed girls of primary age to attend school [File: Bulent Kilic/AFP]

After the Taliban took over Afghanistan, adolescent girls were encouraged to drop out of school until a "safe learning environment" was established. But boys of all grades and girls of primary school age were encouraged to go back to school. 

The exclusion of older girls has increased fears that the Taliban may return to their harsh rule of the 1990s, when women and girls were legally excluded from education and employment. 

Khosti "indicated that the secondary school girls  and their  teachers would be back very soon," said Stefanie Dekker of Al Jazeera in Kabul. 

“We have heard that  from the Taliban since they took power. Yes, they will return. But it will take time. And of course that burdens a lot of girls, ”she said. 

“You want to go back to school, you want to continue your studies. This is also one of the demands of the international community to the Taliban to protect and defend the rights of girls and women to attend school and work ”. 

When the Taliban took power in August, the armed group pledged to protect the rights of girls. and women To preserve women. But his actions since then have concerned the international community. 

Has sent mixed signals about the return of women  to  government offices, forcing universities to enact  gender segregation policies to reopen. He also convened a men's cabinet and said that women could be admitted later. 

Antonio Guterres, the  United Nations Secretary-General, earlier this month condemned the Taliban's "broken" promises to Afghan women and girls and called on the group to fulfill its obligations under international humanitarian and human rights  law. humans. 

"Broken promises lead to broken dreams for  women and girls in Afghanistan," said the UN chief. "Women and girls must be  the center of attention." 

The withdrawal of women's rights by the Taliban has also drawn criticism from Qatar and Pakistan, who have called on the international community to reach an agreement with the Taliban. 

At a press conference last month, Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said it was "very disappointing that the Taliban are taking some steps backwards." 

Al Thani said that Qatar, which is home to the Taliban's political office, should serve as a model for how a Muslim society can be run. "Our system is an Islamic system, [but] we have more women than men in the workforce, in government and in higher education."

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