Malala Yousafzai has urged Muslim leaders to challenge the Taliban government in Afghanistan and its repressive policies for girls and women.
“Simply put, the Taliban in Afghanistan do not see women as human beings,” she told an international summit hosted by Pakistan on girls education in Islamic countries.
Ms Yousafzai told Muslim leaders there was “nothing Islamic” about the Taliban’s policies which include preventing girls and women from accessing education and work.
The 27-year-old was evacuated from Pakistan at 15 after being shot in the head by a Pakistan Taliban gunman who targeted her for speaking out about girls’ education.
Addressing the conference in Islamabad on Sunday, the Nobel Peace Prize winner said she was “overwhelmed and happy” to be back in her home country. She has only returned to Pakistan a handful of times since the 2012 attack, after making her first return in 2018.
On Sunday, she said the Taliban government had again created “a system of gender apartheid”.
The Taliban were “punishing women and girls who dare to break their obscure laws by beating them up, detaining them and harming them”, she said.
She added that the government “cloak their crimes in cultural and religious justification” but actually “go against everything our faith stands for”.
Since the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan in 2021, its government has not been formally recognised by a single foreign government. Western powers have said their policies restricting women need to change.
Afghanistan is now the only country in the world where women and girls are prevented from accessing secondary and higher education – some one and a half million have been deliberately deprived of schooling.