Kandahar’s Morality Police Imposes More Restrictions on Female Healthcare Workers

Sources in Kandahar reported on Wednesday that the Department of the of Virtue and Vice has been harassing and humiliating the families of female healthcare workers, making it increasingly difficult for these women to continue their jobs.

The pressure has led some families to prevent their female members from working in healthcare, especially when it involves travel to rural districts. The morality police has now mandated that female health workers must not only be accompanied by a male guardian (mahram) when travelling to districts, but also carry an official permit from the the Department.

Previously, only an ID card issued by the Department of Public Health was required for the movement of female healthcare workers.
Families of these healthcare workers shared their experiences with Afghanistan International, stating that when they sought permission from the morality police, they were insulted and reprimanded for allowing their female relatives to work.

One relative of a female healthcare worker in Kandahar recalled that the director of the department of vice and virtue in Kandahar spoke to him condescendingly, saying, "Why can’t you keep your wife at home? If she doesn’t have a husband, we can help you. You are a Pashtun; have some shame."

Another man, who went to the Ministry to obtain a mahram permit for his wife, was similarly humiliated, with the official stating, “In foreign organisations, men and women take off their clothes and do whatever they want. Have some decency; how can you send your wife to such places?"

A source in Kandahar’s Department of Public Health confirmed that the director of department of vice and virtue had openly opposed the employment of women in foreign health organisations during a public gathering.
This situation has resulted in many families restricting their female members from working in rural districts, which has, in turn, severely limited healthcare services for women in these areas, posing a serious threat to the health of women and children.