INTERNATIONAL — February 26, 2026

EU Parliament member calls for targeted sanctions on Taliban

A European Parliament member called for targeted EU sanctions on the Taliban over its 'gender apartheid' policies enslaving women, amid warnings from the UN rapporteur against normalizing ties without rights improvements.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Afghanistan International2 min read

EU Parliament member calls for targeted sanctions on Taliban
Image courtesy Afghanistan International

Hanna Neumann, a member of the European Parliament, expressed severe concern over the Taliban courts' penal code, stating that the group 'enslaves women' and urging the European Union to impose sanctions on the Taliban.

In a video message on Wednesday, Neumann said: 'Women are banned from working. Girls are deprived of education and they cannot even go anywhere without a male guardian. This is not just restriction, it is forced dependency. This is slavery.' She emphasized that the law should protect people, but in Afghanistan it is used to eliminate women. According to Neumann, Taliban laws are not for protecting society and what the Taliban offers is 'not culture, not religion, but a legal system based on gender apartheid.'

Neumann called on the EU to respond to the Taliban's misogynistic actions with 'targeted sanctions.' She added that gender apartheid should be recognized as a crime against humanity in EU laws and support provided to Afghan girls and women. She stressed that silence in the face of Taliban behavior 'is not neutrality but complicity with them.'

Over the past year, some EU member countries have sought to establish relations with the Taliban, citing issues such as deporting refugees, stabilizing identity documents for refugees, and preventing potential threats from Afghan soil. Germany has handed over Afghanistan's embassy and consulates to Taliban representatives, while Norway and Austria have accepted Taliban representatives.

Richard Bennett, the UN Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan, warned in a new report, a copy of which was obtained by Afghanistan International, that without urgent international action, Afghan women's deprivation, including access to health services, will persist. Bennett highlighted that escalating Taliban restrictions and declining global aid have deeply impacted women and girls in Afghanistan. In his report focusing on women's and girls' health rights, he stated that Taliban policies, including broad restrictions on education, work, freedom of movement, and health services, systematically violate women's fundamental rights. He described these actions as a clear case of 'gender apartheid.'

Bennett urged the international community to avoid normalizing relations or legitimizing Taliban rule unless there are real and tangible changes in human rights, especially for women and girls. He also called on governments to recognize 'gender apartheid' as a crime against humanity in international documents.

Read the original reporting at Afghanistan International

Reliability assessment

Direct, on-record attribution from named European Parliament member Hanna Neumann via video message with specific quotes; corroborated by details from UN Special Rapporteur Richard Bennett's report obtained by the outlet, including concrete policy critiques.

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Source quotes Neumann's phrases like 'enslaves women' ('به بردگی میکشد'), 'slavery' ('بردهداری'), and 'gender apartheid' ('آپارتاید جنسیتی'), and Bennett's similar framing, which mix strong emotional advocacy language with reporting.

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InternationalTaliban, Hanna Neumann, European Parliament, women's rights, sanctions

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