Two years into Taliban rule, Afghan women ask Canada for education and accountability

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Two years into Taliban rule, Afghan women ask Canada for education and accountability
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Ahead of the second anniversary of the Taliban takeover of Kabul, Afghan women are asking Canadians to join them in protecting gains in girls' education and resisting legitimacy for the terrorist group.

Meanwhile, Ottawa won't say when Canadian development groups will be able to launch projects in Afghanistan.

There were 165 Canadians, including seven civilians, who died during the mission. During that time, girls were able to attend school and rose through the ranks of universities, companies and government departments. Ziayee was raised in Kabul and spent two decades working on development projects in Afghanistan during its democratic period.

Canadian Women for Women in Afghanistan has shifted some of its physical schools to online learning, which parents have their daughters attend in secret. The Liberals passed Bill C-41 in June, which changed parts of Canada's terrorism law that barred aid workers from hiring or purchasing anything in Afghanistan on the grounds that paying taxes to the Taliban amounts to funding a terror group.

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