Taliban orders Afghanistan's beauty salons to close in latest crackdown on women's rights
CBSN
Afghanistan's Taliban rulers, in their latest trampling of women's rights, have ordered the closure of beauty salons across the nation, eliminating one of the last means Afghan women had of earning income and finding social engagement.
Under guidance issued by the de facto Taliban government's supreme leader, "women's beauty salons in Kabul and provinces should be given a month to shut their business activities, and their licenses and contracts will be invalid at the end of the specified period," according to a statement from the Taliban's Ministry of Vice and Virtue, which is responsible for enforcing the group's strict draconian interpretation of Islamic law.
Akif Muhajir, a spokesman for the ministry, sent CBS News a copy of the decree but did not provide any information on why the ban was issued, explaining simply that the "verbal decree has come from the supreme leader."

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