Taliban ban women from parks and funfairs in Afghan capital
The Taliban have banned Afghan women from entering the capital's public parks and funfairs, just months after ordering access to be segregated by gender.
The new rule, introduced this week, further squeezes women out of an ever-shrinking public space that already sees them banned from travelling without a male escort and forced to wear a hijab or burqa whenever out of the home.
Schools for teenage girls have also been shut for over a year across most of the country.
"For the past 15 months, we tried our best to arrange and sort it out -- and even specified the days," said Mohammad Akif Sadeq Mohajir, spokesman for the Ministry for the Prevention of Vice and Promotion of Virtue.
"But still, in some places -- in fact, we must say in many places -- the rules were violated," he said.
"There was mixing (of men and women), hijab was not observed, that's why the decision has been taken for now."
The news was met with dismay by women and park operators -- who invested heavily in developing the facilities.
"There are no schools, no work... we should at least have a place to have fun," said one mother, who asked to be identified only as Wahida.
"We are just bored and fed up with being at home all day, our minds are tired," she said.
"Obviously, in Islam, it is allowed to go out and visit parks. When you have no freedom in your own country, then what does it mean to live here?", she said.