The European Union on Wednesday condemned the Taliban for violating human rights and women's access to education after media reports that the Taliban's leader has ordered private and public institutions to stop providing medical courses for women and girls in Afghanistan.
The Taliban have neither confirmed the order nor responded to the reports. The Public Health Ministry spokesman was unavailable for comment.
In September 2021, a month after they returned to power, the Taliban stopped schooling for girls after grade six. They banned women from university in December 2022.
Medical education, like nursing and midwifery, was one of the few ways they could continue their learning in classrooms.
The BBC and others reported that five institutions across Afghanistan said the Taliban had instructed them to close until further notice, and women training as midwives and nurses were ordered not to return to classes Wednesday.
A 22-year-old midwifery student learned Wednesday that the institute was stopping classes for her and her friends. She had already switched from a law degree after the Taliban halted university for women and expressed her shock and disbelief at the latest decision.
''After an hour, when I calmed down a little, I cried a lot because we had this one way (to study) and it is also closed,'' she told The Associated Press. ''It's a difficult situation to have so many dreams in the field of education. But, in a second, all the dreams are crushed. This is the second time I have faced such a situation.''
Another young woman said she had set out to be a pilot in the armed forces, an ambition that ended after the Taliban's return to power.