Women face growing levels of violence and harassment in Afghanistan more than 14 years after the Islamist Taliban regime was toppled from power by a 2001 US-led invasion.
Of 53 women and girls as young as 13 accused of pre-marital sex -- punishable by up to 15 years in jail -- 48 were subjected to virginity exams, Afghanistan's Independent Human Rights Commission found in a recent study.
Nearly half of them were examined more than once, often in the presence of multiple people, according to the study which was highlighted in a new HRW report yesterday.
"The continued use of degrading and unscientific virginity exams by the Afghan government is part of a broader pattern of abuses in which women and girls are jailed on spurious 'moral crimes' accusations, often in situations where they are fleeing forced marriage or domestic violence."
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Virginity testing is a widely discredited practice in several conservative Islamic nations.
In 2014 the World Health Organisation issued guidelines that the test had "no scientific validity".
Afghanistan has witnessed a sea change in women's rights since the ousting of the Taliban regime, with female lawmakers and even pilots now commonplace.
But gender equality remains a distant dream amid endemic violence against women and strong patriarchal attitudes.