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Weeks on from one of the most destructive earthquakes in Afghanistan’s history, thousands of people in Herat are living in tents next to what remains of their homes.

The 6.3-magnitude quake hit on 11 October, destroying entire villages and leaving more than 2,400 people dead.

Women and children have been disproportionately affected by the disaster, the UN has said, and make up more than 90% of the dead.

For Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world, the road to recovery will be tough and there’s something which has made the situation even worse – the Taliban regime’s oppression of women.

Living amid the rubble of Herat, one Afghan woman, Maryam (writing under a pseudonym), sheds light on why so many women have died and gives her eyewitness account of what’s happening…

It was a Saturday morning when the first earthquake hit in Herat. Like many of my country’s women, I was at home preparing lunch when the whole building started to shake.

It was horrific and I didn’t have time to think about the two things every Afghan woman needs when she leaves the house.

Under the Taliban regime, we are banned from being in public without a burqa and a mahram (a male chaperone). But as the buildings shook around me, I just about managed to leave the house with my phone in my hand.

As I fled to safety, I saw countless women doing the same – running through the streets without even a hijab, or a chaperone. This is a sin, according to the Taliban, and a breach of law.

Since the first earthquake, I’ve heard reports of women being beaten because of their decision to do this. The misogyny of the regime doesn’t even stop in emergency situations.

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Many killed in Afghanistan quake

I’ve visited villages in the Zinda Jan District to try to help with aid efforts. There, I learned many women died in fear. They were afraid of running for their lives and disobeying the male members of their family.

These women were imprisoned in their home by Taliban rules and now they’re dead under the rubble of them.

I saw one middle-aged woman stood at the centre of a destroyed house. She stared straight in front as rescue workers set up a tent, and I asked who it was for.

“The aid is for my sister,” she said. “She’s in hospital and she’s lost all of her children. None of this can help bring them back.”

As tears flowed, she asked me: “For what pain should I cry?”

Read more:
Life as a woman under Taliban rule

Afghan families ‘let down’ by UK government

Image:
Afghan volunteers search through rubble. Pic: AP

The Taliban regime has been negligent and they must be held accountable.

They did nothing to promote earthquake awareness before the disaster. After it, they failed to assess the destroyed villages, which could have saved the lives of people – mostly women and children – wounded under the rubble.

It has not been easy for women who want to help female survivors either. I was told to stay at home and not do anything.

One group of female aid workers managed to get to the badly affected areas with the help of an older man who assisted and asked the Taliban to allow them through. After 10 days, I started to see more female volunteers.

Aftershocks keep happening. “It is a warning, the earth is angry,” an elderly woman said to me after one of them. “Nature responds when rulers of a land oppress their people.”

People are more aware of the dangers now, so these quakes have killed and injured fewer people.

But so many homes have been destroyed and families now live in tents in increasingly cold weather, which is really challenging. Most of the children are getting ill.

It feels like a prison because there’s nothing we can do and there’s so much stress, with many people and lots of noise. Staying alive is our priority.

Image:
A man cleans up rubble after an earthquake in Zinda Jan district

There is so much fear that some families are thinking about leaving the province and returning when it feels safer.

There have been so many earthquakes that we’re scared even the strongest buildings could collapse after a small tremor.

I am inspired by another woman who is living near me in a tent with her family. She has asked me to help her with learning English and every day, she comes to my tent to study.

She gives me hope and happiness at this time, but we need people to speak up for us too.

I hope the UN, human rights and women’s rights organisations persist in calling for Afghanistan’s gender apartheid to end. Afghan women and girls should be given their freedom back.

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