Taliban Publicly Flog Man and Woman in Takhar Province

The Taliban's Supreme Court announced the public flogging of a man and a woman in Takhar province on charges of engaging in an extramarital relationship.

The Taliban's Supreme Court announced the public flogging of a man and a woman in Takhar province on charges of engaging in an extramarital relationship.
According to the court’s statement, the two individuals were each sentenced to 39 lashes, which were carried out in public on Sunday.
The statement, released on Sunday, October 20, clarified that the punishment was based on a ruling from the primary court in Farkhar district.
Despite condemnation from international human rights organizations, the Taliban continues to administer corporal punishment and public floggings.
In the past week alone, the group has publicly flogged 34 individuals, including women, across the provinces of Khost, Kunar, Laghman, and Kabul, on various charges.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has reported that since September 2023, over 733,000 Afghans have returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan.
According to the report, more than 100,000 returnees have received assistance, with one-quarter of these families being female-headed households. The UNHCR published this report on Sunday, detailing the scale of Afghan repatriation from Pakistan over the past year.
Of the 111,700 Afghan returnees from Pakistan who received aid, approximately 48 percent were women. The report further highlights that 2.5 percent of all aid recipients are individuals with disabilities.
The UNHCR noted that around 33 percent of returnees expressed intentions to return to five key provinces, namely Kabul, Nangarhar, Helmand, and Balkh. The agency also observed that the highest numbers of returnees were recorded in May and July 2023, with 38,000 Afghans returning from Pakistan each month during these peak periods.
The report also revealed that, since the beginning of the year, approximately 6,094 Afghans have been arrested or imprisoned in Pakistan.
The deportation of Afghan migrants from Pakistan, which commenced in October 2023, has drawn widespread international criticism. Despite this, Pakistan continues its deportation of Afghan refugees.

Sources from Takhar province have informed Afghanistan International that the Taliban has arrested seven of its own members in the Baharak district on suspicion of collaborating with ISIS.
According to the information received, the seven individuals were detained at one of the Taliban’s checkpoints in the area. Reliable sources disclosed that last Monday, the Taliban launched an operation against ISIS in Baharak district.
The arrests come amidst growing concerns about ISIS’s presence in the region. The United Nations Security Council recently reported that ISIS-Khorasan has ambitions to gain control of Afghanistan. The report suggests that Afghanistan could serve as a base from which neighbouring countries can be infiltrated, thereby increasing the terrorist threat to Central Asia, Russia, and Iran.

Sources have informed Afghanistan International that the Taliban, following its ban on broadcasting images of living beings, is planning to convert some state television stations into radio outlets.
According to these sources, staff from the national television network in Kabul and various provinces are likely to be reassigned to work at these new radio stations.
Information obtained by Afghanistan International suggests that the Taliban is in the process of establishing several new radio stations aimed at promoting the group’s policies and disseminating its religious views.
Sources report that “Radio Bayan-e Shomal” will be renamed “Radio Hurriyat,” with its broadcasts managed by the Taliban’s intelligence services. Additionally, the Taliban plans to launch a dedicated radio station for the Ministry of Interior, and another station for its military forces.
Multiple sources have confirmed to Afghanistan International that the Taliban intends to cease operations of Afghanistan’s national television and replace it with “Radio Shariat,” which is set to resume broadcasting. Radio Shariat was a key media outlet during the Taliban’s first regime under Mullah Omar.
According to sources, Yusuf Ahmadi, the head of national television under Taliban control, stated in a meeting with media managers that the decision to stop television broadcasts was made by the Taliban leadership. The Taliban had already halted national television transmissions in Kandahar and Takhar.
Afghanistan’s national television, as a state-run media platform, came under Taliban control when the group seized power. Over the past three years, the Taliban has suspended many cultural and social programmes on the network and dismissed its female staff.
This move to shut down state-run visual media follows a recent statement by the Taliban’s Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue, which indicated that the group is gradually enforcing a law banning the broadcast of images of living beings. A Taliban official told Agence France-Presse that this law is already being implemented in several provinces.

The Taliban’s Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice has initiated a campaign against the depiction of living beings in images and videos.
A representative from the ministry announced on Saturday that filming and displaying such images in offices or homes contravenes Islamic law.
Under Article 17 of the Taliban’s Law on the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, filming or photographing living beings, or creatures with souls, is prohibited.
The Taliban has officially begun efforts to restrict filming, video recording, and the operations of certain visual media outlets in various provinces. The group asserts that, according to the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad, photography constitutes a “major sin.”
On Saturday, the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue released a statement on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter) featuring remarks from Mohammad Yahya Arif, a Mufti of the ministry. In the statement, Arif declared, “Filming all creatures with souls, including donkeys, dogs, lions, and birds, is forbidden. These images should neither be sold nor purchased, nor should they be kept in homes.”
Addressing the public, the Mufti further noted that “photographing animals like donkeys and birds serves no purpose.”
Arif stressed that “when the Promotion of Virtue declares that images are prohibited and against Sharia, this is not a personal opinion; it is an order derived from Sharia and the teachings of the Prophet of God.”
He called on the public to refrain from photography and the display of images, asserting that these actions are regarded as sinful and would invite “divine punishment.”
Some scholars within the Islamic world have criticised the Taliban’s stance, viewing it as a reflection of their extreme interpretation of Islam. This view contrasts with the interpretations held by other Islamic scholars and institutions, including the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.
There are even scholars who argue that the Taliban’s extremist interpretations contribute to tarnishing the image of Islam.
In line with this stance, the Taliban have classified visual media operations as contrary to Sharia and have officially initiated efforts to close them down. This process began in Kandahar and has since spread to Takhar, where local television stations were ordered to cease operations.
On Saturday, reports emerged suggesting that the Taliban plans to halt broadcasts of Afghanistan’s national television network.

The Purple Saturdays Movement said in a statement that reopening Taliban-controlled schools with extremist content is more dangerous than keeping girls' schools closed.
Promoting extremism could have dire consequences for Afghanistan's future, the movement said.
In a statement sent to the media on Friday, October 19, the Purple Saturdays Movement wrote, "The reopening of Taliban-controlled schools, changes in educational content, and changes in the way students dress are far more dangerous than the closure of schools."
In Taliban-controlled schools, students are being taught extremist ideas, the statement said.
The authors of the statement stressed that women in Afghanistan are aware of their legal and human rights and condemn any violation of these rights.
The Purple Saturdays Movement has called for Taliban leaders to be prosecuted for gender apartheid, war crimes, forced migration, human rights abuses and suicide attacks.
The Purple Saturdays Movement is a protest movement by Afghan women protesters that was formed in response to the Taliban's restrictions on women's rights. Members of this movement use various methods of protest to emphasise women's right to education and freedoms and call on the international community to pay more attention to women's rights in Afghanistan.
