IN PHOTOS: What is happening inside Afghan universities after Taliban takeover?

Private universities and higher education institutions in Afghanistan that are following the new gender format under which male and female students will be taught in separate classrooms, have reopened. Prior to classes resuming on Monday, the Taliban ordered women to wear an abaya robe and niqab and that classes must be segregated by sex or at least divided by a curtain.

Updated On: 2021-09-08 07:58 AM IST

Students attend a class bifurcated by a curtain separating males and females at a private university in Kabul. Pic/AFP

Under its new regime, the Taliban has said that women will be allowed to go to private universities, but they face tough restrictions on their clothing and movement. Pic/AFP

The Acting Minister Abdul Baqi Haqani emphasised that only female lecturers will be allowed to teach girls. Pic/AFP

According to report, the officials are worried about the girls' low attendance at the universities in Afghanistan. Pic/AFP

The assistant chancellor for a private university in Afghanistan, Zainulabuddin, said that among 2,000 students, only 20 of them came on Tuesday. When contacted some of the students, many said the security situation is the reason for their absence, he said. Pic/AFP

Afghan women now have to study separately, they must also end their lesson five minutes earlier than men to stop them from mingling outside. Pic/AFP

The report said the state universities are still closed in Afghanistan. Based on the Ministry's announcements, government universities will open as soon as the separation of classes take place. Pic/AFP

A Taliban fighter (C) walks past shoppers along Mandawi market in Kabul on September 1, a day after the US pulled all its troops out of the country to end a brutal 20-year war -- one that started and ended with the hardline Islamist in power. Pic/AFP

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