Sue gray warned “Afghans were systematically removed from their own society” in it first remarks since they overthrown As sir Keir Starmer‘S Staff chief.
Former top civil servant he warned prime minister And world leaders must not “legitimize any process that the side of the Afghan woman”.
And, Speaking public as she joined Friends of the Afghan woman network (Faun) as a chair, Baronoss Gray said “We all have to gather for the better”.

She said, “I feel honored to my first role I go government It should be invited to chair the Friends of the Afghan woman network. Afghan women are systematically removed from their own society.
“This is not a simple question of education. It is a matter of human dignity, the true global responsibility.
“I was privileged to work with governments that worked hard on the improvement of human rights, and I will learn this in this role.
“The world must not legitimize any proceedings that aside Afghan woman. He must continue to support Afghan women and girls. We all have to gather together.”
Baroness Gray was fired in October as cheese chief cheir keir after losing a bitter struggle for powers with their Guru campaign Morgan McSweeneywhich has since adopted their ex-role.
Mr. Keir then offered a symbolic role of envoy for peoples and regions, but rejected the position.
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Ex-Partygate investigator was blamed due to the terrible start of work in the government after Winning general election election in July. Her early months were tortured by the bench, row over free And the appeals, Mr. Keir failed to plan to the government and lacked driving vision, with policies like Withdrawal of winter fuel payment From a million pensioners who define his mandate.
At that time, the Allies of Barones Gray, who put in, Mr. Keir, said “to” focus on other things. ”
Now the Chairman of Fawn, the British group of campaigns aimed at supporting Afghan women faced with persecution under Taliban rule.
Writing for Independent On Friday, Fawnam Shabnam co-founder warned the girls in Afghanistan lost access to education and participation in public life. “This is not a cultural shade or transitional phase, it is a formalization of birth persecution,” she said.

She added: “The international community must now be moved out of symbolic gestures and adopt a principled, coordinated approach. Diplomatic engagement with Taliban must be conditional on measurable progress on women’s rights.”
FANW calls for increasing funds for organizations that run women who work in the interior and out of Afghanistan, despite the Government of the Keir, which reduced the International Budget to increase the Defense Consumption.