Dozens of women are working in this women’s market and are trying to provide jobs and profitability for women using sewing, embroidery, and other positions.
One of the officials of the tailoring department at the Aino Minna women’s market in Kandahar told Killid that he provided jobs for 15 women at his workplace and taught them tailoring.
He says: “We used to have a lot of orders for sewing clothes, but now it’s less, we’re still losing profit, now we have some improvements, but we need more marketing.”
In this sewing workshop, girls who have lost their family heads are also working and studying. A girl, who did not want to be named, told Killid: “It’s been a year since my father’s martyrdom, there is no one else at home to work. The whole family hopes I will take something home, so now I am trying to learn something at this workshop.
Fereshta, another sewing worker, says that she has been learning sewing for almost a year and a half and now she has found many benefits in this workshop.
He added that he is a 12th-grade student but has missed his lessons due to school closures.
Now we have to cooperate so that the clothes produced by us find a market, if this is done we will all benefit.”
About 100 women work in different fields in Ainu Mina women’s market in Kandahar. They ask the government and businessmen to build exhibitions and market their products as before so that the work is not paralyzed.
Translated by: Shir Ali Jafari
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