Yahoo – AFP,
November 5, 2017
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| An Afghan female student looks on during the graduation ceremony of the first-ever class of Gender and Women’s studies master's programme in Kabul (AFP Photo/ SHAH MARAI) |
Kabul (AFP)
- Afghanistan's first graduates in women's studies donned caps and gowns on
Sunday to collect their unusual qualifications in the patriarchal country.
Kabul
University is the country's first higher education institute to offer a degree
focused on gender and women's issues, according to the United Nations
Development Programme and university officials.
Feminist
theories, media, civil society and conflict resolution were among the largely
women-focused topics covered in the two-year Master's course, funded by South
Korea and run by the UNDP.
Offering
such a degree would have been unthinkable during the Taliban's repressive
1996-2001 Islamist regime, when female issues were taboo and women were largely
confined to their homes and banned from education.
While
protection of women's rights has improved since a US-led invasion toppled the
Taliban, they remain second-class citizens in the male-dominated country.
Among the
22 graduates were seven men, including Mujtaba Arefi.
"This
is the beginning of a change," Arefi told AFP as he waited to receive his
certificate.
"With
these programmes we can understand the women's place and status in our society.
There is the possibility that we will reach a level of gender equality like the
West."
Another
graduate, Sajia Sediqqi, said she hoped her classmates would use their degrees
to improve the situation of women in Afghanistan.
"In a
short period of time we cannot bring about any dramatic change, but with our
higher education we can help change our society and serve our people,
particularly our women."

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