Taliban rulers say they are not behind the threats and are investigating, according to the United Nations.
Explicit death threats have been made against dozens of Afghan women working for the United Nations in Afghanistan, according to a new UN report, where their rights have been severely curtailed since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.
The UN mission to the country said female national staff were subjected to direct death threats in May, in the latest update on the human rights situation in Afghanistan published on Sunday.
The report says the Taliban told the UN mission that their cadres were not responsible for the threats, and an Interior Ministry investigation is under way.
The Interior Ministry spokesman, Abdul Mateen Qani, however, said no threats had been made. โThis is completely incorrectโ, Qani told The Associated Press news agency.
โThe ministry has an independent department for this, and we have a strategic plan for protection and security so there is no threat to them in any area, nor can anyone threaten them, nor is there any threat to them.โ Qani did not answer questions about an investigation, according to AP.
The threats came from unidentified individuals related to their work with the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, or UNAMA, other agencies, funds, and programmes, โrequiring the U.N. to implement interim measures to protect their safetyโ, according to the report.
The Taliban barred Afghan women from working at domestic and foreign nongovernmental organisations in December 2022, extending this ban to the UN six months later. They then threatened to shut down agencies and groups still employing women. Aid agencies and NGOs say the Taliban have disrupted or interfered with their operations, allegations denied by authorities.
The UN report is the first official confirmation of death threats against Afghan women working in the sector. The report also highlighted other areas affecting womenโs personal freedoms and safety, including inspectors from the Vice and Virtue Ministry requiring women to wear a chador, a full-body cloak covering the head. Women have been arrested for only wearing the hijab.
Women have also been denied access to public areas, in line with laws banning them from such spaces.
A UN report from August 2024 found that Afghanistanโs Taliban government has โdeliberately deprivedโ at least 1.4 million girls of their right to an education during its three years in power.
About 300,000 more girls are missing out on school since UNESCO last carried out a count in April 2023, it said on Thursday, warning that โthe future of an entire generation is now in jeopardy.โ
ICC targets Taliban for persecution of women
The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants in July for two top Taliban leaders in Afghanistan on charges of abuses against women and girls.
ICC judges said at the time there were โreasonable groundsโ to suspect Taliban Supreme Leader Haibatullah Akhunzada and Chief Justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani of committing gender-based persecution.
โWhile the Taliban have imposed certain rules and prohibitions on the population as a whole, they have specifically targeted girls and women by reason of their gender, depriving them of fundamental rights and freedoms,โ the court said in a statement in July.
Theย Talibanย has โseverely deprivedโ girls and women of the rights toย education, privacy, family life and the freedoms of movement, expression, thought, conscience and religion, ICC judges said.
The Taliban has rejected the ICC warrants as โbaseless rhetoricโ, saying it does not recognise the ICCโs authority, and underlined the courtโs failure to protect the โhundreds of women and children being killed dailyโ in Gaza.


