 
    
    
    
  radio Loading ...
schedule ON AIR: 7:05 - 8:30
music_note NOW PLAYING:- Loading ...
After Afghanistan's deadly earthquake, injured women and girls face a dire lack of medical care. Taliban restrictions and cultural barriers leave many without help. https://p.dw.com/p/4zwHj Afghan men walk on the rubble of a damaged house following a deadly magnitude-6 earthquake that struck Afghanistan on Sunday Women are notably absent from the majority of photos and videos from Afghanistan's earthquake zoneImage: Sayed Hassib/REUTERS ADVERTISEMENT One of Afghanistan's worst earthquakes in history struck the country's eastern provinces of Kunar and Nangarhar on Sunday with a magnitude of 6 at a shallow depth of 10 kilometers (6 miles). More than 1,400 people have died, according to the Taliban. At least 3,124 others were injured, and more than 5,400 houses were destroyed. Women are notably absent from the majority of photos and videos from the earthquake zone released by news agencies and aid organizations. Women are not even seen among the injured people who have been hospitalized. How the Taliban oppresses women There are no official laws about male guardianship in Afghanistan, but the Taliban have said women cannot move around or travel a certain distance without a man who is related to them by blood or by marriage. Afghan women are also required to hide not only their faces and bodies but also their voices outside the home. "Male family members do not allow women or girls to be seen by strangers," women's rights activist Fatemeh Rezaei told DW. "They also don't want strangers helping them." Rezaei lives in the western city of Herat — which is far from the earthquake zone — but she is in contact with activists across the country. Afghanistan rocked by aftershock as death toll hits 1,400 01:55 Volunteer female doctors who were near remote villages in the mountainous region and wanted to help in the immediate aftermath of the quake were prevented from doing so by the Taliban. Men from the villages also rejected their help. "We don't even know whether and how women were injured," Rezaei said. More people are still feared trapped under the rubble. Indrika Ratwatte, the UN humanitarian coordinator in Afghanistan, said on Tuesday that even reaching the disaster was a "huge challenge." During the crucial first 24 hours, access was severely limited because landslides and rockfalls had destroyed several access roads. Many people were buried as they slept when the earthquake happened and became trapped under the roofs of their homes, which were made of clay and wood. The region is remote and lacks basic infrastructure in many places. Even before the earthquake's destruction, many areas didn't have electricity. No female doctors for injured women Local sources in Kunar and Nangarhar reported that the medical centers in the provinces are facing a severe shortage of female doctors, which significantly complicates the treatment of injured women. "We have information about the deaths of several injured pregnant women who died due to the lack of female doctors," Zahra Haghparast, a dentist, told DW. "Do you know how many female doctors and nurses in Afghanistan are currently ready to set out immediately to help these injured women?" Haghparast asked. "But the Taliban won't grant them permission." Haghparast, who now lives in Germany, was forced to close her dental practice in Kabul after the Taliban returned to power in 2021, following the withdrawal of US and NATO forces. Her protest activities, together with her association with other women who were forced to give up their work and withdraw from public life, made her a target of the Taliban. She was arrested, mistreated, and released in exchange for money.