(Kabul) The founder of a network of schools open to girls in Afghanistan was arrested Monday in Kabul, the UN announced on Tuesday, asking the Taliban authorities to clarify the reasons for his arrest, while the education of girls is an extremely sensitive topic in the country.

Matiullah Wesa, head of the Pen Path organization and “girls’ education advocate, was arrested in Kabul on Monday”, tweeted the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (Manua). She asks the authorities to “clarify his whereabouts, the reasons for his arrest and to ensure that he has access to legal representation and contact with his family”.

Afghanistan is the only country in the world where girls’ education is prohibited after primary school. Teenage girls were banned from secondary schools by the Taliban authorities, who returned to power in August 2021, who also denied women the right to study at university.

Several reasons have been put forward by the Taliban government, in particular considering that women, who should ideally wear the hijab covering the entire body and face, were not dressed enough. He also explained that these establishments would be reopened to them once an Islamic education program was developed.

Contacted by AFP on this arrest, the Taliban authorities have so far not responded.

Matiullah Wesa’s brother confirmed his arrest, saying he was arrested leaving a mosque after Monday evening prayers.

“ Matiullah had finished his prayers and was leaving the mosque when he was stopped by men in two vehicles ”, Samiullah Wesa told AFP. “When Matiullah asked them for their identity cards, they beat him and took him by force”.

For Samiullah, his brother was arrested for his work in the education sector. “He never worked with anyone else, not even with the previous government. He only worked for Pen Path,” he insisted.

Matiullah Wesa, 30, an Afghan education activist, is the founder and president of the organization Pen Path.

Despite the banning of secondary schools for girls, he continued to travel to remote areas to gain support from locals and spread awareness of the importance of girls’ education.

“We are counting the hours, minutes and seconds that separate us from the opening of schools for girls. The damage caused by school closures is irreversible and undeniable,” he tweeted last week as the new school year began in Afghanistan.

His organization has established 18 libraries and launched a book distribution campaign with the aim of making people in rural areas literate.

The UN special rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, said he was alarmed by his arrest. “His safety is paramount and all his rights must be respected,” he tweeted.

In early February, an Afghan university professor was also arrested by the Taliban after condemning the ban on women in his country from studying. He was finally released after 32 days in captivity.

Ismail Mashal, a veteran journalism professor, had caused a storm by tearing up his diplomas on television in December to protest against the decree banning higher education for women.

The order against girls’ education is said to have come from Afghanistan’s supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, and his ultra-conservative aides who are deeply skeptical of modern education, especially for women.

Since their return to power, the Taliban authorities with their austere interpretation of Islam have multiplied measures against women’s rights, gradually excluding them from public life.

Many women have lost their jobs in the public sectors and since November, they are also no longer allowed to go to parks, gymnasiums or even public baths.

They are also prohibited from traveling without being accompanied by a male relative and must cover themselves fully when leaving their homes.