Afghan women’s pop star, Aryana said on Thursday confirmed her escape after the Taliban Kabul City takeover.
“I am kind and alive and after a few unforgettable nights, I have reached Doha, Qatar and are waiting for a flight to finally return to Istanbul,” Aryana Sayeed said 1.3 million Instagram followers.
When women and daughters begged their livelihood under the rigorous Taliban government, Sayeed, 36, who recently starred in as a judge about the competition show on Afghan television, told reporters that he left through US cargo jet, reported New York Post.
The singer was one of the lucky ones because of expatriates from all over the world struggling to find flights abroad.
“Aryana Sayeed in 2015, singing at a stadium, breaking 3 tabses: 1-singing as a woman 2-not wearing a hijab. 3 – Entering the stadium as a woman, which is banned under the Taliban. Now, all of them have turned into Dreams, “Tweet One of Human Rights Activists.
From Doha, he continued Turkey where he lived full time with her husband Sayib, an Afghan music producer. “After I go home and my thoughts and emotions come back to normal from the world of distrust and shock, I have many stories to share with you,” he said in the message of his emotional social media, reported the New York Post.
Other leading Afghan women were not so lucky, including Governor of Hazara Regency, Salima Mazari, who was reportedly arrested on Wednesday. Many fear of mazari, which openly criticized terrorist groups, may be executed, report the New York Post.
Meanwhile, women in Afghanistan protested terrorist groups, expressing concerns over how they would be represented in every future government in a war-hit country.
Some women who have worked in government and non-government institutions show and demand that their rights must be protected in every future government, according to Tolo News.
This development came after the Taliban said that it had begun to discuss the formation of new governments.
Taliban at their first press conference after controlling Afghanistan said that women’s rights would be “respected with the Islamic legal framework.” Even so, some female journalists in Afghanistan said they were banned from working by groups.