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regular-article-logo Sunday, 05 May 2024

TV anchor Beheshta Arghand says Taliban don’t accept women

Her live interview made headlines around the world as she became the first Afghan female journalist to quiz a member of the hardline group

Reuters Doha Published 03.09.21, 01:02 AM
Representational image.

Representational image. Shutterstock

Afghan television anchor Beheshta Arghand gathered her breath and adjusted her headscarf to look more like a traditional close-fitting hijab when a Taliban official showed up, uninvited, in her studio, asking to be interviewed.

It was only two days after the Islamist group took over Kabul. She looked down at her body to be sure that no other parts were showing and started firing her questions.

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Her live interview made headlines around the world as she became the first Afghan female journalist to quiz a member of the hardline group.

“(Luckily) I always wear long clothes in the studio because we have different people with different minds,” the 23-year-old told Reuters in Doha, where she has lived since fleeing Afghanistan on August 24 with the help of Nobel Prize winner Malala Yousafzai.

“Women — Taliban they don’t accept. When a group of people don’t accept you as a human, they have some picture in their mind of you, it’s very difficult,” she said.

The interview, part of a broader Taliban media campaign, aimed to show a more moderate face as they promised they would respect women’s rights and include other Afghan factions in a power-sharing deal.

Arghand had already been on set in the studio when the Taliban official arrived.

“I saw that they came (to the television station). I was shocked, I lost my control ... I said to myself that maybe they came to ask why did I come to the studio,” she added.

It was about a week before her life turned into a nightmare, she said.

She said the Taliban ordered her employer Tolo News to enforce that all women should wear a hijab and subsequently suspended female anchors in other stations.

She said the Islamist group also asked local media to stop talking about their takeover and their rule. “When you can’t (even) ask easy questions, how can you be a journalist,” Arghand said.

Many of her colleagues had already left the country by then despite Taliban assurances that the freedom of the media was improving every day and that women would have access to education and work. She was soon to follow, along with her mother, sisters and brothers.

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