Shafiqa Ziaie or Shafiqa Ziaye (born 1928) was an Afghan educator and cabinet minister.[1] She belonged to the generation of pioneer women who attained public positions in Afghan society after the reforms of Mohammed Daoud Khan.
Life
editShe was born in Kabul.
She was orphan, but completed her studies up to the 8th grade, which was not a given thing in Afghanistan, where most women did not attend school at all. She left school to take care of her two brothers and a sister, but still managed to take her annual exam and graduate from Malalay High School and attend Women's College.
She worked as an inspector of girls' schools. In 1960–1961, she studied French and Administration in Switzerland.
She served as Minister without Portfolio in 1971–1973. She was the second woman to become a member of the Afghan government.[2][3]
She was named Advisor for the Ministry of Planning in 1972.
She was appointed Minister of state for Women's Affairs in 1976. No other woman was to be appointed to this post until the post was reinstated by the appointment of Sima Samar in 2001.
References
edit- ^ Rahimi Fahima. ( 1977, with 1~ update of 1985 by Nancy Hatch Dupree), Women in Afghanistan /Frauen in Afghanistan, Kabul
- ^ The first five was Kubra Noorzai in 1965, Shafiqa Ziaie in 1971, Anahita Ratebzad in 1976, Masuma Esmati-Wardak in 1990 and Saleha Farooq Etemadi in 1990.
- ^ Khan, Sarfraz, and Samina, Politics of Policy and Legislation Affecting Women in Afghanistan: One Step Forward Two Steps Back (2013). Central Asia, No.73. Winter 2013, pp. 1-24, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2765247
- M. Saed: Women in Afghanistan history
- Rahimi Fahima. ( 1977, with 1~ update of 1985 by Nancy Hatch Dupree), Women in Afghanistan /Frauen in Afghanistan, Kabul
- Hafizullah Emadi, Repression, Resistance, and Women in Afghanistan