A rare public protest by women in Kabul turned violent on Wednesday when Taliban security forces opened fire, killing at least three demonstrators and wounding a dozen others. The incident has prompted the United Kingdom to call for an emergency session of the United Nations Security Council, warning that the crackdown risks a broader humanitarian and security crisis.
The protest, organised by a clandestine network of women's rights activists, demanded an end to the Taliban's systematic exclusion of women from public life. Since seizing power in August 2021, the Taliban has barred girls from secondary education, restricted women's employment, and enforced strict dress codes. Wednesday's demonstration was one of the largest since the takeover, with an estimated 200 women gathering in a central square before being dispersed by gunfire.
Witnesses reported that security forces initially used batons and water cannons, but when protesters refused to disperse, they opened fire with assault rifles. The Taliban's interior ministry claimed its forces were responding to an "unlawful assembly" and that the deaths were under investigation. However, videos circulating on social media show uniformed guards firing directly into the crowd.
British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly condemned the killings as "cowardly and inexcusable" and announced that the UK would seek an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council. "The Taliban's brutal suppression of women's voices is a clear violation of international law and a threat to regional stability," Cleverly said in a statement. "We will not stand by as they erase women from Afghan society."
The UK, which holds the Security Council presidency for June, has scheduled the emergency session for Friday. Diplomats expect the meeting to produce a resolution condemning the violence and demanding the Taliban reverse its policies. However, previous resolutions have had little impact on the Taliban's behaviour, and analysts question the effectiveness of further condemnation without enforcement mechanisms.
Wednesday's protest follows a pattern of sporadic civil disobedience met with increasingly violent repression. Last month, a similar protest in Herat was broken up with tear gas and arrests. Human rights groups estimate that hundreds of women have been detained since the Taliban returned to power, with many subjected to torture and forced disappearances.
The international community has struggled to formulate a coherent response to the Taliban's rule. Sanctions and diplomatic isolation have failed to moderate its policies, while aid cuts following the takeover have deepened Afghanistan's economic collapse. The UN has warned that 97 per cent of the population now lives in poverty.
For the women who took to the streets on Wednesday, the stakes were existential. "We are not afraid to die," one protester told a local journalist before the crackdown. "We are already dead inside as we watch our daughters lose their futures."
The Taliban's interior ministry has not commented on the UK's call for a UN session. In previous statements, Taliban officials have insisted that women's rights are protected under Islamic law and accused Western powers of interfering in Afghanistan's internal affairs.
As the Security Council prepares to meet, the families of those killed in Wednesday's protest mourn their dead. The UK's emergency session offers a diplomatic avenue, but for many Afghan women, the path forward appears increasingly narrow.








