Baerbock says G7 working to strengthen Ukrainian air defense
December 22, 2022
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock also slammed the Taliban's move to exclude women from universities as a "step towards the Stone Age."
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German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on Thursday said the G7 leaders had agreed to additional support for Ukrainian air defense at a press conference alongside Danish counterpart Lars Loekke Rasmussen.
Baerbock said that this year was "anything other than a normal year,” referring to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
G7 ministers agree to more aid for Ukraine
The minister said that the G7 states had agreed to continue cooperation for the strengthening of Ukraine's air defense, adding that Berlin was providing IRIS-T defense systems and additional Gepard anti-aircraft guns. She also welcomed Washington's announcement it will send US Patriot Systems to Ukraine.
Speaking after Baerbock, Rasmussen said that "unity in Europe is more important than ever,” and called Moscow's invasion of Ukraine "inhuman.”
The minister called for the acceleration and intensification of German-Danish cooperation.
University ban: Afghanistan's disenfranchised women
Since seizing power in mid-2021, the Taliban have increasingly restricted the rights of Afghan women and girls. Now, the hardline Islamists are denying women access to higher education, sparking international outrage.
Image: AFP
Leaving for good?
A woman in a burqa leaves a university in Kandahar province. She won't be allowed to return. In a government statement Tuesday, the hardline Islamist Taliban instructed all universities in Afghanistan, private and public, to ban women from attending. As of now, all female students are barred from universities.
Image: AFP
Women are excluded
Taliban control the entrance to a university in Kabul the day after the university ban was imposed. Female students are told they cannot go in. The ban is set to remain in place indefinitely. There have, however, already been some signs of protest at the universities: Male students walked out of an exam, and some male teachers went on strike.
Image: WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images
Higher education for men only
Some restrictions had already been put in place before now. After the Taliban took power in August 2021, universities had to separate entrances and classrooms by gender. Women could only be taught by other women or by old men. This picture shows how screens separated an area for female students at Kandahar University.
Image: AFP/Getty Images
The last of their kind
These female students at Benawa University in Kandahar were still able to graduate in March with degrees in engineering and computer science. The renewed restriction of women's rights in Afghanistan has come in for heavy international criticism. Human Rights Watch called the university ban a "shameful decision," while the UN said it violated women's human rights.
Image: JAVED TANVEER/AFP
'Devastating impact on the country's future'
Thousands of girls and women took university entrance exams as recently as October —as here, at Kabul University. Many wanted to study medicine or become teachers. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the university ban "not only violates the equal rights of women and girls, but will have a devastating impact on the country's future."
Image: WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images
No educational opportunities for girls
The ban on university attendance is yet another restriction on educational opportunities for women and girls. For over a year now, teenage girls have only been able to attend secondary school up to seventh grade in most parts of the country. These girls walking to school in eastern Afghanistan are lucky: Some of the provinces away from the Taliban's central powerbases are ignoring the ban.
Image: AFP
Land of invisible women
Girls and women are now excluded from most aspects of Afghan public life. They haven't been allowed to visit gyms or parks in Kabul for months. Even this amusement park in the capital is off-limits to female visitors. The Taliban justify the ban by saying regulations on the separation of the sexes were not being observed, and women were not wearing the headscarf as required by the Taliban.
Image: WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images
Dystopian reality
Women gather saffron flowers in Herat province. This is work they are allowed to do, unlike most other professions. Since coming to power, the Taliban have enacted a great many regulations that hugely restrict the lives of women and girls. For example, they are forbidden from traveling without a male companion and must wear the hijab or burqa outside their home at all times.
Image: MOHSEN KARIMI/AFP
'A blot of shame on the world'
Many Afghan women refuse to accept the abolition of their rights. These women were demonstrating in Kabul in November. A placard, in English, reads "Horrific Condition of Afghan Women Is A Blot of Shame to the World Conscience." Anyone who dares to protest requires a great deal of courage. Demonstrators risk beatings and imprisonment, and women's rights activists are persecuted in Afghanistan.
"Gender persecution may amount to a crime against humanity, under the Rome Statute, to which Afghanistan is a state party,” the minister said.
"Women and girls in Afghanistan aren't just not allowed in universities anymore, they aren't allowed in parks, they aren't allowed to step outside the door unveiled, they aren't allowed to learn," she said.
"Taliban policies designed to erase women from public life will have consequences for how our countries engage with the Taliban," the G7 foreign ministers said in a statement following talks.