Thank you for this question.
This movement of “Women, life, freedom” actually started from the Kurdish area. Because it started from the margins, it brought those voices that usually are omitted from the voices in the centre. This time, this movement has brought people together. It has given a voice for the first time amongst the movement to, for instance, Baluchi women and Kurdish women. They now have the space that historically they have never had. That to me is a very major thing.
The situation of Hazaras in the context of Afghanistan, unfortunately, is not as bright. There are still lots of attacks by the Taliban, especially for Hazaras inside Afghanistan, because they are a religious minority as well as a racial minority. That really needs the attention of our international community. They live in a gender apartheid society, but they are also especially prosecuted for being Hazaras and being a Shia minority. Unfortunately, that's one of the saddest situations in Afghanistan—the Hazaras who are left behind.