UNICEF warns Afghanistan could lose up to 25,000 female health workers, teachers

UNICEF warns Afghanistan could lose up to 25,000 female health workers, teachers

By Jasper Ward

Reuters FILE PHOTO: Schoolgirls attend psychotherapy class at a school in Kabul, Afghanistan May 26, 2021. picture taken May 26, 2021. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Afghan girls look at Taliban supporters on the second anniversary of the fall of Kabul on a street near the US embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, August 15, 2023. REUTERS/Ali Khara/File Photo

Students attend psychotherapy classes in Kabul

April 27 (Reuters) - Afghanistan is at risk of losing more than 25,000 female teachers and health workers by 2030 if ‌the Taliban-led country's restrictions on girls' education and women's employment are ‌not lifted, according to a new UNICEF report released on Monday.

The Taliban has banned women from ​most public sector jobs and limited girls to receiving an education only until the age of 12.

These restrictions, according to the report, have already affected at least 1 million girls - a figure that is expected to double by 2030 ‌if nothing changes. UNICEF called ⁠on the Taliban to lift the ban that it imposed after returning to political power in 2021.

UNICEF's "The Cost of Inaction ⁠on Girls' Education and Women’s Labour Force Participation in Afghanistan" report found a rapid decline in qualified women entering the teaching and healthcare sectors.

Advertisement

Up to 20,000 female ​teachers and ​5,400 health workers could be lost ​by 2030, according to the report, ‌which estimated that this figure is about 25% of Afghanistan's 2021 workforce. As many as 9,600 health workers could be lost by 2035, it added.

"Afghanistan cannot afford to lose future teachers, nurses, doctors, midwives, and social workers, who sustain essential services," UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said. "This will be the reality ‌if girls continue to be excluded from ​education."

Female healthcare workers are required to attend to ​female patients, and female teachers ​are preferred for girls in gender-disaggregated schools whenever possible, the ‌report noted.

The growing decrease could have ​at least a ​AFN 5.3 billion ($84 million) annual economic impact on Afghanistan's economy, according to UNICEF, which added that this is the equivalent of about 0.5% of ​the country's gross domestic ‌product.

Afghanistan's de facto authorities should safeguard skills training and allow women ​to participate in the labor market, UNICEF said.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward ​in Washington; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

 

SnS JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com