UN Security Council to meet on Taliban ban on women aid workers

The closed-door UN Security Council meeting was requested by the United Arab Emirates and Japan for 13 January. The UAE announced the request in a tweet.
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The United Nations has said that 97 percent of Afghans live in poverty [AFP/Getty]

The United Nations Security Council is due to meet privately next week to discuss a decision by Afghanistan's Taliban-led administration to ban women humanitarian aid workers, diplomats said on Wednesday.

The closed-door meeting was requested by the United Arab Emirates and Japan for 13 January. The UAE announced the request in a tweet.

The ban on women aid workers was announced by the Islamist Taliban-led administration on 24 December.

It followed a ban imposed earlier last month on women attending universities.

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Girls were stopped from attending high school in March.

UN aid chief Martin Griffiths is due to visit Afghanistan in the coming weeks to meet with Taliban officials.

At least four major global groups have suspended operations because they said they were unable to run their programmes without women staff.

The United Nations has said that 97 percent of Afghans live in poverty, two-thirds of the population need aid to survive, and 20 million people face acute hunger.

(Reuters)