Noorullah Munir, the acting head of the Taliban's Ministry of Education, said that education was an inalienable Islamic and legal right of women and that the Taliban had no problem with it, adding that efforts were under way to get all girls back to school.
He added that after the Taliban came to power, the Ministry of Education gradually began its work and reopened schools until the sixth grade, and after two weeks, boys' schools were reopened across the country, and now their classes continue as usual. has it.
Munir told Bakhtar state news agency about girls' right to education:
There must be a plan for women's education, and education in an Islamic society must be done within an Islamic framework.
The head of the Taliban Ministry of Education said that more than 90% of the ministry's offices are currently active:
The Islamic Emirate is committed to educating women. Religious leaders and scholars are working on a comprehensive plan that is in line with both Afghan culture and our Islamic law, and at the same time favors the majority of our nation, and will begin the process of educating women.
He said the former Afghan government's focus was solely on educating urban women and ignoring rural women as one of their failures, noting that the Taliban, along with cities, emphasize and are committed to educating women in all parts of the country.