| samenvatting |
The term “gender apartheid” re-emerged after the Taliban’s 2021 return to power in Afghanistan, reviving 1990s debates when it was first used to describe their extreme oppression of women. Originally, the concept leveraged the moral weight of racial apartheid to mobilize global attention, without legal definition. Today, campaigns like End Gender Apartheid (EGA) seek to codify it as a crime against humanity under international law, defining it as systematic domination by one gender group over another. This shift from rhetoric to legal action aims to compel concrete responses, such as sanctions or accountability. However, critics warn that legal recognition could, under the Responsibility to Protect (R2P), justify military intervention—echoing past controversies over Western interventions in Afghanistan. While current advocates focus on peaceful pressure, the legal framework risks being co-opted for interventionist agendas. The debate also exposes divisions among feminists: some view the apartheid analogy as universalist or imperialist, while others see it as essential for mobilizing action. Despite these tensions, the term’s growing use at the UN reflects urgent international concern for Afghan and Iranian women, and the need for effective, legally grounded solutions. |