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She was told to marry in a country which bans girls' education. So she got in a taxi and fled
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She was told to marry in a country which bans girls' education. So she got in a taxi and fled

BBC News · May 24, 2026, 9:02 PM · Also reported by 1 other source

Key takeaways

  • But Alia, who is 19, and her cousin weren't stopped at any Taliban checkpoints, and made it to the capital.
  • "I made up an excuse to my family saying I was coming here to meet my friends and former classmates.
  • Instead, she arrived in Kabul with a plan: she enrolled in an English language course.

Why this matters: a developing story that could shape the day's news cycle.

Yogita Limaye South Asia and Afghanistan correspondent, in Kabul BBC/Imogen Anderson Alia travelled to the Afghan capital to escape the prospect of marriage as her only option Alia - whose name we have changed for her safety - travelled hundreds of miles from her village to Kabul to escape marriage.

The journey by taxi last year with her female cousin - covered from head to toe, only their eyes visible, as the rules decree - was an exceptional thing to do, and risky in Afghanistan, where at any moment they might be caught by the Taliban inspectors enforcing rules banning women traveling long distances without a male relative escorting them.

But Alia, who is 19, and her cousin weren't stopped at any Taliban checkpoints, and made it to the capital.

Article preview — originally published by BBC News. Full story at the source.
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