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Ipswich art project reveals hidden lives of Afghan women at DanceEast

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"Window to the Soul Afghanistan" combines art and technology to amplify voices silenced by Taliban's "Vice and Virtue" laws.

Why it matters: The project creates a safe platform for women and girls in Afghanistan to share their stories despite Taliban restrictions that forbid female creative expression and severely limit women's rights.

The details: The exhibition combines virtual reality, augmented reality and visual art to tell stories of life before and after Taliban rule, launching at DanceEast's Jerwood DanceHouse on Friday, 28 February, from 10:30 to 13:00.

The exhibition, funded by Arts Council England's National Lottery Project Grants, will remain on display in the Whistler Gallery for four weeks.

Hannah Aria said, "The women and girls in Afghanistan wanted to participate, to protest at such expressions of creativity, opinions or lived experience being forbidden under the Taliban regime. This project is about using art for social justice and human rights advocacy."

Hannah Aria
Hannah AriaHannah Aria

How it works: The exhibition features three main immersive experiences:

  • A 360° virtual gallery of artwork created by women still in Afghanistan

  • A virtual reality installation that replicates a rural Afghan home environment

  • Augmented portraits featuring AI-generated voices

The technology provides security for participants in Afghanistan, using what Aria calls "deep fake technology as a force for good" to protect identities while humanising stories.

Behind the scenes: The project team spent a year creating a secure platform for 11 women still in Afghanistan to safely share their stories despite significant risks.

The project began with ideas from Hannah Aria, Rona Panjsheri and Ramin Sayadi, with extensive input from Almas Ipswich – a free Ipswich-based support group for Afghan women and their children.

Other collaborators include Future Female Society, The Hive, and international organisations Voicesunveiled.org and rightolearn.ca.

What's next: The project has been shortlisted for the Unlimited UK Partner Award, which would provide £15,000 for further development if successful.

The Aga Khan Museum in Toronto is currently evaluating the project for potential collaboration, and the team hopes to tour major arts venues across the East of England.

Window to the Soul Afghanistan by Hannah Aria will launch at DanceEast on Friday 28, February
Window to the Soul Afghanistan by Hannah Aria will launch at DanceEast on Friday 28, FebruaryHannah Aria

The bigger picture: The exhibition comes as new Taliban "Vice and Virtue Laws" further restrict Afghan women's rights, mandating full face and body coverings, banning women from singing in public, and prohibiting education beyond primary school for girls.

The EU has described these restrictions as "systematic and systemic abuses... which may amount to gender persecution, which is a crime against humanity."

The bottom line: The project aims to raise awareness of challenges faced by Afghan women while supporting campaigns for reinstated access to education and for gender apartheid to be recognised as a human rights crime under international law.

For more information or to book VR tours after the launch, visit windowtothesoulafghanistan.com or email hannah@windowtothesoulafghanistan.com.

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Are organised crime fronts hiding in plain sight on Ipswich high streets?

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The National Crime Agency's crackdown on high street businesses suspected of links to organised crime has made headlines in Shrewsbury but remains conspicuously absent in Ipswich, despite remarkably similar retail patterns.

A pattern emerging elsewhere

While Ipswich residents have yet to witness raids on local businesses, a stark scene is unfolding elsewhere: officers forcing their way into brightly-coloured barber shops, vape stores, minimarts, candy stores and phone repair shops that have proliferated across town centres.

Last month, the National Crime Agency (NCA) coordinated 265 raids on such premises across England and Wales as part of Operation Machinize, targeting high street businesses suspected of being fronts for international crime gangs – but it remains unclear if Suffolk, or Ipswich, has been part of this operation.

Organised crime and the impact on Ipswich's high street
Oliver Rouane-WilliamsIpswich.co.uk

Shrewsbury and Ipswich: towns with similar profiles

In Shrewsbury, a market town not dissimilar to Ipswich, officers detained two Kurdish asylum seekers during raids on barber shops, seizing thousands of pounds in cash and illicit vapes. The intelligence suggested these establishments were linked to money laundering, illegal immigration and drug dealing.

The parallels between Shrewsbury and Ipswich are difficult to ignore. Both are historic county towns with traditional market squares, and a mix of independent and chain retailers. Both have experienced the same influx of barber shops, vape stores, minimarts, candy stores and phone repair shops on their high street.

Yet while Shrewsbury has seen decisive action, Ipswich residents have yet to witness any comparable enforcement activity. At least not visibly. And if it has, it has yet to make any difference.

The Ipswich landscape

According to commercial property analysts Green Street, the average number of barbers per person in England and Wales has doubled in the past decade.

Walk through Ipswich town centre and the changing retail landscape is evident – multiple barber shops, vape outlets, phone repair shops and sweet shops often within yards of each other, typically with very few visible customers.

It is important to note that we are not suggesting any specific businesses in Ipswich are engaged in illegal activity. The presence of these shops alone does not indicate wrongdoing, and many could be legitimate businesses.

But questions should be asked. And questions are being asked – repeatedly – by residents.

The scale of the problem

The National Crime Agency estimates that £12 billion in illicit cash is laundered in the UK annually, with lots of it flowing through criminal front organisations on high streets.

These businesses appeared to surge as shop vacancies grew following the pandemic, creating opportunities for criminal gangs to establish themselves in plain sight.

The suspicious signs are easy to spot: businesses claiming implausible income levels, unpaid utility bills despite supposed high turnover, and the sale of illicit products like illegal vapes and tobacco.

In Greater Manchester, linked mini-marts were found to be staffed by asylum seekers, some working illegally, with hidden compartments concealing contraband.

What Operation Machinize uncovered

During Operation Machinize, authorities discovered cannabis farms, seized Class A drugs, arrested 35 people and questioned 55 suspected illegal immigrants. Three potential victims of modern slavery were identified. Bank accounts worth over £1 million were frozen and £40,000 in cash seized.

Detective Inspector Daniel Fenn, who led raids in Shrewsbury as part of the operation, said: "Members of the public are angry. They can see these fronts are there. The criminals feel they are hidden here. They think they can come to sleepy areas and won't be found."

The same could easily be said of Ipswich.

The pattern of exploitation is particularly concerning – the NCA believes some shops are used as fronts for drug-trafficking, people-smuggling, modern slavery and child sexual exploitation. In 2023, it secured the conviction of one Iranian Kurdish barber shop owner who was using his London premises as a base for smuggling 10,000 people to the UK in small boats.

Impact on legitimate businesses

Legitimate barbers are calling for a registration scheme and stricter regulation. Gareth Penn, chief executive of the Hair and Barber Council, highlighted how illegal barbers have led to fungal infections from improperly cleaned equipment.

More importantly, though, is the damage being done to genuine businesses that cannot compete with those avoiding costs and taxes, and those that cannot find suitable high street premises.

The damage is significant and potentially long-lasting.

Will Ipswich be next?

For Ipswich, the question now is whether Operation Machinize will visibly extend to Suffolk – or indeed, whether it already has without public knowledge.

Unlike local police forces, the National Crime Agency is exempt from Freedom of Information requests, making it impossible for journalists or the public to determine how many Ipswich businesses, if any, have been investigated.

This distinction is important.

While local police forces handle everyday law enforcement, the NCA was specifically created to tackle serious and organised crime that extends across police force boundaries, international borders, or requires specialist capabilities.

Their involvement signals that these high street businesses are not merely local issues but part of sophisticated criminal networks operating nationally and internationally.

Security Minister Dan Jarvis has stated that "high street crime undermines our security, our borders, and the confidence of our communities", promising "decisive action" to bring those responsible to justice.

The road ahead

There are concerns about the effectiveness of current measures. Of the 265 raids conducted, only 10 shops have been shut down permanently. Many businesses raided were back operating within minutes of officers leaving.

The challenge for authorities extends beyond individual shops to dismantling the organised crime networks behind them – networks that may have been profiting in plain sight for years on our high streets. While local police forces can target individual businesses, only the NCA has the mandate and resources to tackle the international networks behind them.

For Ipswich residents concerned about these issues, the prospect of action against suspicious businesses cannot come soon enough. However, due to the secretive nature of NCA operations, we may never know the full extent of their activities in our town – only their results, if and when they choose to make them public.

Ed Sheeran surprised more than 200 Ipswich students with an impromptu performance at The Baths

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