Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024
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Looking back at 2022, rights groups, experts and advocates agree that “it’s not a very bright picture” for many women around the world.

“We’ve had some real challenges and, with a lot of indicators, we’re actually going backwards both globally and in Australia,” Simone Clarke, chief executive of UN Women Australia, told the ABC.

“In terms of big events and big challenges, it’s certainly been a year of those.”

A woman in a white collared shirt holds a lock of her hair at Bondi Beach in protest, with many other protesters
Protesters have been cutting their hair in solidarity with women in Iran.(ABC News: Sophie Kesteven)

In March, on International Women’s Day, Amnesty International released a statement warning that events in 2021 and in the early months of 2022 had conspired “to crush the rights and dignity of millions of women and girls”.

And that was before the Taliban’s further crackdowns on the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan, the escalation of the brutal suppression of women in Iran, and the US overturning the longstanding constitutional right to abortion.

Australian National University lecturer at the Crawford school of public policy Annabel Dulhunty said the roll-backs were alarming. 

“I think it’s a bit sad, in many ways, when we look back at 2022 and see that women have [fewer] rights than their mothers did in many places,” Dr Dulhunty said.

However, in the face of major challenges, there has been a massive swell of feminist solidarity around the world, which is giving women hope. 

Young people, in particular, have been coming together and risking their lives to voice “enough is enough”, Ms Clarke said. 

And, in some countries, there have been significant gains. 

Here are some of the highs, lows and surprises from a tumultuous year for women’s rights. 

A girl looks on among Afghan women completely covered by blue burqas.
Under the Taliban, women are forced to cover themselves completely outside of their homes.(Reuters)

Thirty years of gains gone ‘almost overnight’

Since the Taliban’s takeover in August 2021, women who grew up in an era of relative opportunity in Afghanistan have had their lives turned upside down.

Implementing a strict interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, the Taliban has been increasingly cracking down on women’s rights and freedoms. 

Girls have been banned from middle school and high school, and just in the last weeks of the year, women were also barred from attending universities or working for non-government organisations.

Now, sixth grade is the highest level of education available for girls in Afghanistan.

Women are also restricted from most employment, must wear head-to-toe clothing in public and are banned from parks and gyms.

“We had almost 30 years of gains for women’s rights in Afghanistan eradicated almost overnight with the change in power in Afghanistan,” Ms Clarke said.

Iranian women in the spotlight 

Although it has taken 43 years, Nos Hosseini has been overwhelmed by the scale of uprising and international attention Iranian women’s rights have gained in recent months.

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