BBC Afghan Service, in Kabul
BBCExcessive on a hill within the west of the Afghan capital, Kabul, behind a metal gate topped with barbed wire, lies a spot few locals converse of, and even fewer go to.
The ladies’s wing of a psychological well being centre run by the Afghan Pink Crescent Society (ARCS) is the most important of solely a handful of amenities within the nation devoted to serving to ladies with psychological diseases.
Locals name it Qala, or the fortress.
The BBC gained unique entry to the crowded centre the place employees discover it tough to deal with the 104 ladies at present inside its partitions.
Amongst them are ladies like Mariam* who says she is a sufferer of home violence.
Regarded as in her mid-20s, she’s been right here for 9 years, after enduring what she describes as abuse and neglect by her household, adopted by a interval of homelessness.
“My brothers used to beat me each time I visited a neighbour’s home,” she alleges. Her household didn’t need to let her out of the home alone, she says, due to a cultural perception that younger ladies shouldn’t go away the home with out supervision.
Ultimately, her brothers appeared to have kicked her out, forcing her to reside on the streets at a younger age. It was right here a girl discovered her and, apparently involved about her psychological well being, introduced her to the centre.
Regardless of her story, Mariam’s smile is continually radiant. She is commonly seen singing, and is among the few sufferers allowed to work across the constructing, volunteering to assist with cleansing.
She is prepared – and keen – to be discharged.
However she can’t go away as a result of she has nowhere to go.

“I do not count on to return to my father and mom. I need to marry somebody right here in Kabul, as a result of even when I am going again dwelling, they will simply abandon me once more,” Mariam says.
As she will be able to’t return to her abusive household, she is successfully trapped within the facility.
In Afghanistan, strict Taliban laws and deeply-rooted patriarchal traditions make it almost unattainable for ladies to reside independently. Girls are legally and socially required to have a male guardian for journey, work, and even accessing many providers, and most financial alternatives are closed to them.
Generations of gender inequality, restricted training, and restricted employment have left many ladies financially depending on male breadwinners, reinforcing a cycle the place survival usually hinges on male kin.
Sat on a mattress in one of many dormitories is Habiba.
The 28-year-old says she was delivered to the centre by her husband, who was forcing her out of the household dwelling after he married once more.
Like Mariam, she now has nowhere else to go. She too is able to be launched, however her husband won’t take her again, and her widowed mom can’t assist her both.
Her three sons now reside with an uncle. They visited her initially, however Habiba hasn’t seen them this 12 months; with out entry to a telephone, she can’t even make contact.
“I need to be reunited with my kids,” she says.

Their tales are removed from distinctive on the centre, the place our go to, together with conversations with employees and sufferers, is overseen by officers from the Taliban authorities.
Some sufferers have been right here for 35 to 40 years, says Saleema Halib, a psychotherapist on the centre.
“Some have been utterly deserted by their households. No-one comes to go to, and so they find yourself dwelling and dying right here.”
Years of battle has left its mark on the psychological well being of many Afghans, particularly ladies, and the difficulty is commonly poorly understood and topic to stigma.
In response to a current UN report on the worsening scenario of ladies’s rights in Afghanistan, Hamdullah Fitrat, Taliban authorities’s deputy spokesperson, informed the BBC that their authorities didn’t permit any violence in opposition to ladies and so they have “ensured ladies’s rights in Afghanistan”.
However UN knowledge launched in 2024 factors to a worsening psychological well being disaster linked to the Taliban’s crackdown on ladies’s rights: 68% of ladies surveyed reported having “unhealthy” or “very unhealthy” psychological well being.
Companies are struggling to manage, each inside and outdoors the centre, which has seen a several-fold improve in sufferers over the past 4 years, and now has a ready checklist.
“Psychological sickness, particularly despair, is quite common in our society,” says Dr Abdul Wali Utmanzai, a senior psychiatrist at a close-by hospital in Kabul, additionally run by ARCS.
He says he sees as much as 50 outpatients a day from totally different provinces, most of them ladies: “They face extreme financial strain. Many haven’t any male family member to offer for them – 80% of my sufferers are younger ladies with household points.”
The Taliban authorities says it’s dedicated to offering well being providers. However with restrictions on ladies’s motion with no male chaperon, many can’t search assist.

All of this makes it tougher for ladies like Mariam and Habiba to go away – and the longer they keep, the less locations there are for individuals who say they desperately need assistance.
One household had been making an attempt for a 12 months to confess their 16-year-old daughter, Zainab, to the centre, however they have been informed there have been no beds obtainable. She is now one of many youngest sufferers there.
Till then she had been confined to her dwelling – her ankles shackled to stop her operating away.
It isn’t clear what psychological well being issues Zainab has been experiencing, however she struggles to verbalise her ideas.
A visibly distressed Feda Mohammad says the police lately discovered his daughter miles from dwelling.
Zainab had gone lacking for days, which is very harmful in Afghanistan, the place ladies usually are not allowed to journey lengthy distances from dwelling with no male guardian.
“She climbs the partitions and runs away if we unchain her,” Feda Mohammad explains.
Zainab breaks down into tears from time to time, particularly when she sees her mom crying.
Feda Mohammad says they observed her situation when she was eight. However it worsened after a number of bombings hit her college in April 2022.
“She was thrown in opposition to a wall by the blast,” he says. “We helped perform the wounded and accumulate the our bodies. It was horrific.”
Precisely what would have occurred if house hadn’t been discovered is unclear. Zainab’s father stated her repeated makes an attempt to run away have been dishonouring him, and he argued it was higher for her and her household that she is confined to the centre.
Whether or not she – like Mariam and Habiba – will now change into one in every of Qala’s deserted ladies stays to be seen.
*The names of the sufferers and their households have been modified all through


















































