SOCIETY — March 24, 2026
Kabul Sources: Women Forced into Begging After Taliban Work Bans
Local sources in Kabul report that Taliban bans on women's work have forced many family-supporting women into begging, exposing them to street insults and violence. The women and sources urge UN intervention amid broader restrictions on education and movement.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — 2 min read

KABUL (Afghan Verified) — Local sources in Kabul say many women responsible for supporting their families have been forced into begging following the Taliban's bans on women's and girls' right to work.
The sources told Amu TV that the restrictions have plunged families into economic crisis, with women and girls facing daily hardships. Two women interviewed under pseudonyms described their situations. Fereshta, one of the women, said she had no choice but to beg after the bans eliminated her livelihood. Lilma, the other, recounted having a fixed income from previous work but now resorting to begging.
The women and sources emphasized that begging exposes them to street insults and violence. They called on the United Nations and the international community to urgently address the situation.
Upon returning to power, the Taliban closed schools to female students above the sixth grade and banned girls and women from universities. They also imposed restrictions on women's work and movement, according to the sources.
Local sources described the ongoing policies as causing a human rights crisis and severe economic consequences for families, particularly affecting women.
Read the original reporting at Amu TV →
Reliability assessment
Single source relying on unnamed 'local sources' in Kabul and pseudonymous interviewees; no named officials, specific checkable details (e.g., numbers of women affected, exact locations/times), or independent corroboration for the core claims of women forced into begging and facing violence.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Amu TV: "forced into 'begging'" (ناگزیر شدهاند به تکدیگری) frames women as desperate victims; "exposed to 'street insults and violence'" (در معرض توهین و خشونت خیابانی) evokes emotional fear and vulnerability; call for the UN to "urgently address their situation" adds advocacy and plea for external intervention.
Independent web corroboration
An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.
Across the newsrooms
Filed by
Amu TV
Originating
Framed
Framed
Filed under
Society — Taliban, women's rights, Kabul, begging, economic crisis
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