SOCIETY — March 22, 2026
Female Students in Kabul Urge Islamic Emirate to Reopen Girls' Schools
Female students in Kabul, including Mojdeh, Sama and Hasnia, are calling on the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan to reopen girls' schools amid prolonged closures. Activists like Lamia Shirzai warn of rights violations and risks to the nation's future.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with ToloNews — 2 min read

Female students in Kabul have renewed calls on the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan to reopen schools for girls, voicing concerns over ongoing closures that have disrupted their education.
Mojdeh, a student who moved from Takhar to Kabul with her family to continue studies in courses, said: "Our request from the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan is to open the doors of schools to girls."
Sama, another student, stated: "Our request is that schools reopen so we can study. Afghan girls have no hope left and their only hope is this education and schooling."
Hasnia, who has completed sixth grade, expressed worry about being unable to progress further. "I request the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan to open the doors of schools to girls, since they have big dreams," she said.
Women's rights activist Lamia Shirzai urged the immediate reopening of schools and universities at the start of the new year. "This must be done on the basis of the interests of the people of Afghanistan, so that this country does not fall behind in regional and global competitions for growth and development," she said.
Activists warn that the continued closures violate girls' right to education and pose serious challenges to an entire generation's future.
Schools and educational institutions for girls have remained closed since the political transformations in Afghanistan. Human rights and international organizations have emphasized that education is a basic human right and that depriving girls of it will lead to profound social, economic and cultural consequences.
Read the original reporting at ToloNews →
Reliability assessment
Single source (ToloNews) provides direct, on-record quotes from named individuals (students Mojdeh, Sama, Hasnia; activist Lamia Shirzai) with concrete details (location: Kabul), verifying their statements on school reopenings.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. ToloNews: "Afghan girls have no hope left" (emotional despair in student quote), "violates girls' right to education" (advocacy judgment on rights violation), "puts the future of a generation at serious challenges" (mild alarmism about long-term harm).
Independent web corroboration
A separate web search returned 8 matching reports. A selection:
Students say the prolonged restrictions threaten the future of an entire generation and are calling on the international community not to remain silent. They are urging global actors to increase pressure on the Taliban to lift restrictions and allow girls and women to return to classrooms. According to UNESCO, more than 1.4 million girls in Afghanistan are currently out of school due to restrictions on female education, making the country the only one in the world where girls are banned from secondary and higher education.
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Society — Kabul, girls' education, Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, women's rights, school closures
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