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Metropolis Reality Forums « Afghan women go high-tech »

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   Afghan women go high-tech
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   Author  Topic: Afghan women go high-tech  (Read 229 times)
Rhune
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29289456 29289456   rhune_1971   Rhune1971
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Afghan women go high-tech
« on: Apr 11th, 2003, 10:26am »
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Afghan women go high-tech
Thursday, April 10, 2003 Posted: 4:55 AM EDT (0855 GMT)
 

 
KABUL, Afghanistan (Reuters) -- The screensaver on 18-year-old Nabila Akbari's desktop computer shows a spectacular sunrise, and with just a few clicks on the mouse she replaces it with bright spring tulips.  
 
The Kabul University student hopes she is part of a new beginning in war-ravaged Afghanistan, where less than two years ago a young woman like her would hardly have been let out of her house, let alone into a classroom to study information technology.  
 
On Tuesday, Nabila became one of the first 17 Afghans trained in their own country to earn industry standard certificates in computer networking skills and part of what her government hoped would be a growing talent pool of badly needed information technology specialists.  
 
More than two decades of war have meant Afghanistan was largely bypassed by the IT and Internet revolution.  
 
A U.N.-supervised programme largely funded by computer giant Cisco Systems aims to create a core of specialists to take the country into the digital age.  
 
It is also seen as a means to boost opportunities for women in what remains, despite the demise of the Taliban, a heavily male dominated society.  
 
Of the 17 students who received certificates from the university's Cisco Networking Academy on Tuesday, six were women. It aims to train 200 students by the year-end.  
 
Nabila was one of the star pupils in the first class. "My personal goal is to share this knowledge with other Afghans, especially Afghan women," she said.  
 
'Allow women to learn'
 
Women of different ages now study at various educational institutions.    
Another graduate, Rita Dorani, aged 23, echoed her thoughts.  
 
"My message for all Afghan women is to try as much as possible to learn about computers, because it is essential for every man and woman to be aware of this global technology. Men should allow women to learn this technology."  
 
Under the fundamentalist Taliban regime, which was ousted in late 2001, women were banned from all forms of education and forbidden to venture outside their houses without coverall burqa garments.  
 
Such official restrictions have been relaxed under the Western-backed government of President Hamid Karzai, but women's rights are still significantly curtailed, especially in the provinces, in what remains a conservative Islamic state.  
 
Marc Lepage, project director of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), said there were plans to extend it into the provinces, starting with Herat in the west of the country, where the conservative government has re-imposed some restrictions on women's rights in the past year.  
 
UNDP's Deputy Director for Afghanistan Knut Ostby said that while Afghanistan lagged decades behind in information technology, it now had a chance to catch up.  
 
"Afghanistan has been shut out of world developments over several decades," he said. "This has been a problem, but today it is giving Afghanistan some tremendous opportunities in terms of skipping a number of intermediate steps and going straight to the state of the art technology of today.  
 
"The class that is graduating today is part of the force that will help Afghanistan leapfrog straight into the 21st century."  
 
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Re: Afghan women go high-tech
« Reply #1 on: Apr 13th, 2003, 4:11am »
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Progress is great but they still have a very long way to go.
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29289456 29289456   rhune_1971   Rhune1971
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Re: Afghan women go high-tech
« Reply #2 on: Apr 13th, 2003, 12:54pm »
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I'm just happy to hear there is any progress at all. Last I heard out of here, the ladies weren't being given any opportunities and much of it had gone back to the Taliban ways.  I am pleased to hear this is not the case all over and that progress, while slow, is still happening.
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