INTERNATIONAL — March 13, 2026

Session on Sidelines of UN Women's Commission Addresses Access to Justice for Afghan Women and Girls

A side session at the UN Women's Status Commission saw representatives from Finland, Australia, Ireland, Spain and Greece voice concerns over restrictions on Afghan women by the Islamic Emirate and call for coordinated international pressure to lift them. Officials stressed women's participation as key to Afghanistan's stability, while quoting condemnations of policies violating human rights commitments.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with ToloNews2 min read

Session on Sidelines of UN Women's Commission Addresses Access to Justice for Afghan Women and Girls
Image courtesy ToloNews

UNITED NATIONS — A session held on the sidelines of the UN Women's Status Commission at UN headquarters focused on ensuring access to justice for Afghan women and girls.

Participants expressed concern over the human rights situation of Afghan women and demanded the lifting of restrictions imposed by the Islamic Emirate on their lives. Country representatives from Finland, Australia, Ireland, Spain and Greece emphasized that without Afghan women's presence and participation in society, the country will not achieve lasting stability and prosperity.

Laura Riznin, Finland's representative, said: "Excluding half of Afghanistan's population has disastrous consequences for the entire Afghan society. We support all Afghan women and girls and their immense resistance. Without their presence, Afghanistan will never achieve lasting stability and prosperity."

Michelle O'Brien, Australia's representative, stated: "Restrictions on women and girls' access to education, work, health services, and legal support violate international human rights commitments and undermine their dignity and right to self-determination."

Representatives from Ireland, Spain and Greece called for holding the Islamic Emirate accountable and increasing coordinated pressure through the European Union and UN to change policies toward Afghan women. Fergal Mityan, Ireland's representative, said: "We will also continue our work through the European Union and UN to pressure the Taliban in any way we can to change their discriminatory decrees and policies."

Kretian Petiani, Greece's representative, said: "Greece strongly condemns these outrageous actions. We urge the Taliban to immediately end these actions and respect Afghanistan's international commitments, especially the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women."

The Islamic Emirate has not commented recently on this matter but has previously emphasized that the rights of all citizens, including women, are ensured within the framework of Islamic Sharia in the country.

Read the original reporting at ToloNews

Reliability assessment

Single source (ToloNews) provides direct, on-record attribution with concrete, checkable details including named representatives (Laura Riznin, Michelle O'Brien, Fergal Mityan, Kretian Petiani) from specific countries at a known event (UN Women's Status Commission sidelines).

The source language reads straight.

Across the newsrooms

Filed by

Filed under

InternationalUN Women's Commission, Afghan women, Islamic Emirate, Taliban policies, human rights

Spotted an error or have more on this story? Tip the desk on Telegram → or WhatsApp →.

Reader supported

Keep Ehtebar running

Every published story uses paid tools to translate reporting, compare sources, extract claims, and produce a clearer read on Afghanistan. Reader support helps keep that work independent.

€5

helps cover daily verification runs

€15

supports a week of source comparison

€50

keeps independent analysis moving