Calls for Taliban to let Afghan girls return to high school as boys' classes resume
ABCThirteen-year-old Zala Sherani loves karate, martial arts and swimming, and she is preparing to start high school next term. Key points: The Taliban has said the ban on high school for girls is temporary But girls are still unable to attend 18 months after the ban Girls and their parents say learning is in line with Islamic law and they want an education "I feel very excited, and a bit nervous. "Girls secondary school education is delayed until the committee finalises its work," he said. Save the Children called for the Taliban to immediately reverse the high school ban for girls, saying a failure to do so "will drive up child marriage, exclude half of future generations from the workforce and entrench families further into poverty", which could profoundly damage the country's future. Soon after a ban on university education for women in December, the Taliban's Education Minister Neda Mohammad Nadeem told state broadcaster RTA: "We told girls to have proper hijab but they didn't and they wore dresses like they are going to a wedding ceremony."