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  "path": "/2026/03/06/women-taliban-apartheid-south-africa-united-nations/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-03-06T20:46:20.000Z",
  "site": "https://msmagazine.com",
  "tags": [
    "Global",
    "Justice & Law",
    "News & Opinion",
    "Afghan Women",
    "Africa",
    "Civil Rights",
    "Education Equity",
    "Global Women's Rights",
    "Middle East",
    "United Nations",
    "Young Women and Girls",
    "Women and the Taliban: Apartheid by Another Name",
    "Ms. Magazine"
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  "textContent": "_Apartheid_ is the one Afrikaans word that the whole world knows. It is arguably South Africa’s greatest contribution to the development of international criminal law so far.\n\nAs a South African who lived under apartheid, I recognize the same architecture of systemic oppression in the Taliban’s rule over women in Afghanistan.\n\nIn the same way that Black people were excluded from spaces and services—“whites only” beaches and benches, for example, and entire suburbs—women in Afghanistan are excluded from public life. They are not permitted to travel outside their homes without a mahram, a close male relative. Authorities have instructed businesses and health clinics to refuse services to all women who are not accompanied by a mahram.\n\nThe post Women and the Taliban: Apartheid by Another Name appeared first on Ms. Magazine.",
  "title": "Women and the Taliban: Apartheid by Another Name"
}