
-
Brazil president leads final farewell to Uruguay's Mujica
-
Donald edges Bradley as Ryder Cup captains contend at PGA
-
Eurovision semi starts with milkshake and space odyssey
-
Ruud mesmerised by 'next level' Sinner in Rome destruction
-
Coinbase expects data breach to cost it up to $400 mn
-
Eagle chip helps Gerard grabs PGA Championship lead with 66
-
England great Anderson set for Lancashire return
-
Sinner sends message by demolishing Ruud to reach Italian Open semis
-
Rubio says no high expectations for Ukraine-Russia talks in Turkey
-
NFL owners to vote on allowing players at 2028 Olympics
-
Sinner demolishes Ruud to reach Italian Open semi-finals
-
Rashford to miss final two games of Aston Villa's season
-
70 South African white rhinos to be relocated to Rwanda
-
West Indies issue LA 2028 Olympic cricket plea
-
Gaza strikes kill over 100 as Hamas says aid entry 'minimum requirement' for talks
-
Nantes striker Mohamed fined for sitting out game marking anti-homophobia campaign
-
Hamilton admits he underestimated Ferrari challenge
-
Israel in Eurovision spotlight at second semi-final
-
England's Donald shares PGA Championship lead with 67
-
WTA president Simon to step down in December
-
Antonelli draws on Hamilton's heart-warming message for inspiration
-
South African rugby mourns death of Cornal Hendricks at 37
-
Cool Piastri plays down prospects of more McLaren domination
-
Hadid sister helps launch Palestinian film streaming site
-
Groves wins neutralised Giro sixth stage, former winner Hindley abandons
-
Knight eager to be 'one of the girls' under new England captain Sciver-Brunt
-
Ukraine sends team for Russia talks, downplays expectations
-
Paolini delights home crowd by reaching 'dream' Italian Open final
-
Guyana says soldiers attacked in disputed border region with Venezuela
-
Paolini delights home crowd by reaching Italian Open final
-
Combs's ex Cassie faces intense cross-examination
-
US set to lose $12.5 bn in foreign tourism in 2025: industry
-
Ex-Olympic swim champion Agnel to go on trial over rape allegations
-
US Supreme Court weighs judicial checks on Trump with birthright case
-
English trio among early contenders at PGA Championship
-
US retail sales little changed, signs of pullback after pre-tariff rush
-
NATO on track to strike spending deal to please Trump
-
Slovenia probes disappearance of latest Melania Trump statue
-
Amorim urges Man Utd to focus on Chelsea, not Europa League final
-
Gaza air strikes kill over 100 as manhunt unfolds in West Bank
-
US Fed chair warns of potential for 'more persistent' supply shocks
-
Walmart warns of higher prices due to tariffs
-
Paul reaches Italian Open semis ahead of Sinner's clash with Ruud
-
New Cannes Festival policy bans actor accused of rape
-
Tottenham's Kulusevski out for the season as Son steps up recovery
-
Leclerc absent as under par Ferrari face home race
-
Rome businesses count their blessings with US pope
-
World's top three launch early charge at PGA Championship
-
Maresca 'happy' with pressure of Champions League challenge
-
'Miracle': family reunites in Kashmir after fleeing conflict

Afghanistan problem 'can be solved': former women's affairs minister
Afghanistan has been cloaked in "darkness" since the return of the Taliban government three and a half years ago, but the country's former women's affairs minister insists the problem "can be solved".
When the Taliban swept back to power in August 2021, "everything was lost", Massooda Jalal, a former minister and the first woman in Afghanistan's history to run for president, told AFP in an interview this week.
"They brought back the darkness we had fought so hard to escape."
Despite promises not to return to the brutality displayed during their first stint in power in the 1990s, the Taliban authorities have imposed a harsh interpretation of Islamic law, including the return of public floggings and executions.
Women and girls have been barred from education beyond the age of 12, from holding many jobs and from many public spaces in what the United Nations has described as "gender apartheid".
Jalal, a 61-year-old medical doctor who served as Afghanistan's women's affairs minister from 2004 to 2006, insisted that "there is a way to replace the darkness with the light".
"It is challenging, but it is not impossible," she told AFP in Geneva, where she and her daughter Husna were being awarded a women's rights prize at the annual Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy.
"It can be solved."
- Light -
She called for an international conference, like the United Nations-backed talks held in Bonn, Germany in 2001.
Those talks saw the signing of a landmark deal to create a post-Taliban leadership and usher in democracy after the militants were ousted by a US-led invasion following the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.
"The political regime in Kabul is not supported by the people, and it is not recognised and supported by the world," said Jalal, now an activist who lives in the Netherlands.
"It has no meaning, so why continue that? Millions of people there are suffering."
With a little bit of international will, she insisted that pressure could be exerted on the Taliban authorities and those propping them up to ensure they participate.
The international community, she insisted, has a responsibility to bring an end to the deep suffering in Afghanistan.
"The world should not just keep watching it," she said.
Jalal recalled her elation in 2001 "when the international community came in and set the democratic agenda".
"The light came into the country."
- 'Will not be erased' -
Jalal, who at that time was a UN aid worker, after the Taliban had chased her from her post as a professor at Kabul University, stood in the country's first presidential polls in 2004.
She was surprised when she lost to Hamid Karzai, garnering just 1.1 percent of the votes.
"I thought I was going to be the winner," she said, pointing out that her opponents were all linked to armed groups, while she claims she had become very popular after travelling all over the country, handing out aid.
While that loss was disappointing, Jalal rejected the idea that Afghans were not ready to see women in power.
She called for the swift restoration of democracy, insisting that "of course, women should be given equal rights".
And since "they suffered more than others... they should get extra... We need to bring more and more women into the process and into leadership in the country".
During her speech to this week's rights summit, Jalal lamented her own "forced exile".
"But exile does not mean surrender," she said.
"I will continue to fight for democracy, for justice, for the dignity of every Afghan woman, because we will not be erased."
R.Flueckiger--VB