Afghan woman, 22, ‘faces death by stoning for secretly teaching girls taekwondo’ | News World

Khadija Ahmadzada was allegedly detained for training girls in secret in her home

A young woman who secretly trained girls in taekwondo in Afghanistan could also be stoned to death, activists fear.

Khadija Ahmadzada, 22, was arrested on January 10 in Herat for defying the Taliban’s ban on women playing sport.

Authorities discovered she was teaching students the martial art in a hidden courtyard at her home.

Her detention has prompted fears from activists that she has already been sentenced to death for the illicit activity.

The campaigners are desperately trying to lift awareness of the Taliban crackdown in hopes her killing could be averted.

British-Afghan activist Shabnam Nasimi said on Instagram: ‘She refused to just accept that being female is a criminal offense.

Shabnam Nasimi
Shabnam Nasimi is looking for the world to avoid wasting Ahmzada (Picture: Wikimedia/Hossein29394)

‘That quiet act of defiance has come at a price, when the Taliban’s morality police out, witnesses said they raided her home and detained her.

‘There are rumours from people around Khadija that the court has ruled on an extreme death sentence  – stoning – for the crime of practicing and playing sport.

‘For anyone who doesn’t know what stoning is, it’s when stones are thrown at a living human being until they bleed, collapse and die.’

Nasimi added that witnesses claim Ahmadzada and her father were dragged out of their home before being held for greater than per week.

She said that Ahmadzada’s family have reportedly heard nothing from the 22-year-old for longer than per week.

The activist called on her followers to ‘draw attention to ‘flood the web’ with Ahmadzada’s name in an effort to ‘save her life’.

Nasimi said: ‘When the international highlight lands on a regime like this, they hesitate.

‘Not because they grow a conscience, but because they fear consequences, pressure, exposure and intervention.

‘If Khadija becomes famous enough, they could back off.’

When the Taliban announced the ban on education for girls above 7th grade, 17-year-old Farahnaz [not in shot] turned to volunteering as a teacher in her hometown, Lashkar Gah, Helmand. One year on, having lost her chance to finish her schooling and go to university, she still brings hope to girls younger than her. According to Farahnaz, ???Since the day the Taliban returned to power, many things have changed. Starting with the education of girls to the increase in poverty and the lack of basic needs of families. There are many families without a man who would be their provider, their breadwinners are only women. These women are now forced to beg and depend on others to give them their leftovers. Personally, I was very active before all these changes happened. I used to go to my lessons and work outside the house. From the day the Taliban took over there is not much that I'm allowed to do anymore. Even going out of the house is a worry and not easy at all. It used to be easier. Nowadays going out is difficult. The eyes of the people seem to follow me. This makes me very uncomfortable. Since the closure of the schools, our morale is low. We lost our confidence. Our schools must be opened so that our teachers and students can both benefit and have a better future. I cannot go to the university anymore, since the new authorities took over the universities and the schools are closed for girls. Before the Taliban took over, I was continuing my education. I had one more year to finish school and I would have gone to university. Now, I am volunteering as a teacher. I volunteer so that children don???t lose their interest in education. I see it in my own family, the children are less passionate about learning. I am here to help these children find their passion about learning again. I have many dreams for the children I teach, but there is little hope for a better future. With this government and the situation the country is going through, I see
Young girls are actually now not allowed in class after the age of 12-13 on account of Taliban restrictions, which also bans all female sports (Picture: Mark Naftalin/Unicef)

An entire generation of Afghan women and girls lost their freedom when the Taliban took control of the country in 2021.

Girls have been turned away from school, forced to veil their face and body in any respect times in public, will not be allowed to have a look at men they aren’t related or married to, and even be seen in their very own homes from neighbouring properties.

Even the sound of girls singing or just talking to and hearing one another has been banned, as a part of the Taliban’s ‘vice prevention strategy’.

And feminine beggars pleading for money or food within the streets say they’ve been raped, beaten or made to perform forced labour by Taliban officials.

A UN report in July said the ministry for the ‘propagation of virtue and the prevention of vice’ was contributing to a climate of fear and intimidation amongst Afghans, especially women and girls.

In 2022, Unicef employee Sam Mort called the sweeping oppression of girls and girls ‘the largest humanitarian crisis on the earth’.

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