Taliban Flogs Two Men In Paktika For Alleged Extramarital Affairs

The Taliban's Supreme Court announced that the group flogged two people on Wednesday in the Warmi district of Paktika province on charges of having extramarital affairs.

The Taliban's Supreme Court announced that the group flogged two people on Wednesday in the Warmi district of Paktika province on charges of having extramarital affairs.
The Taliban said that one of the defendants was sentenced to 39 lashes and the other was given 29 lashes.
According to a statement by the Taliban's Supreme Court, the group sentenced the first defendant to five years in prison and the second defendant to two months in prison.
The Taliban has not commented on the identities of the suspects.
Despite international condemnation, the Taliban government announces the implementation of corporal punishment sentences against defendants almost daily.
Human rights organisations have repeatedly called on the Taliban to end corporal punishment of defendants.


In response to Pakistan's airstrikes on Paktika, Taliban’s intelligence agency spokesman Jawad Sargar said that Punjab has been separated from other parts of Pakistan and now the possibility of Pakistan's disintegration is stronger than ever.
Sargar said that the Pakistani army has no incentive to fight and that the Taliban should seize the opportunities.
"The tribes have risen up, the soldiers of Islam are fighting there, the people are suspicious of the government, and the army has no incentive to fight," Sargar wrote in a note on social media platform X.
In the note, which appears to be in response to recent attacks by Pakistani warplanes on TTP centres in Barmal district of Paktika province, the Taliban’s intelligence agency spokesman wrote, "Now is not the time for promises or expressions of feelings, strategic alliance is needed, power is needed, unity is needed."
According to the Taliban spokesman, Punjab province has been separated from other parts of Pakistan and there is a "high probability of disintegration" of Pakistan.
He described the history of the Pakistani army as full of "shame and disgrace", which he said the "Ummah of Islam" considers the Pakistani government to be the second "Zionist regime".
In his note, the Taliban's intelligence agency spokesman stressed that "we must therefore seize the opportunities”. The Taliban spokesman did not specify who he meant by "soldiers of Islam”.
However, he appears to be referring to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants who have intensified their attacks against Pakistani security forces in recent years, especially after the Taliban took power in Afghanistan.
Islamabad expected that with the Taliban's rise to power in Afghanistan, the intensity of attacks by its allies, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in Pakistan, would decrease, but on the contrary, the group increased the intensity of its attacks in the country.
Senior Pakistani officials have accused the Afghan Taliban of harbouring and training TTP fighters. Earlier, Pakistan's defence minister had threatened that Islamabad might launch an attack against TTP bases on Afghan soil.
On Tuesday evening, as Pakistan's special envoy Mohammad Sadiq visited Kabul and met with senior Taliban officials, Pakistani warplanes attacked TTP headquarters in Barmal district of Paktika in eastern Afghanistan. The Taliban said that 46 civilians, including women and children, were killed in the attack.
Earlier on Wednesday, TTP spokesman Mohammad Khurasani said at least 50 people, including 27 women and children, had been killed in Pakistani airstrikes. The victims are displaced persons who fled to Afghanistan due to the Pakistani army's invasion in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, he said.

A group of civil society activists has announced the release of Hamid Qarluq, an Uzbek civil and social activist, from the Taliban's custody.
This group, called "Hamid Qarluq's Justice Team", wrote in a statement that the health and mental condition of this social activist is not good due to torture meted out to him inside the Taliban's prison.
The group called on human rights organisations and the international community not to be indifferent to the human rights situation in Afghanistan and to defend the freedom and rights of civil and social activists.
Hamid Qarluq was arrested by the Taliban's intelligence agency in Takhar province without any specific charges.
Earlier, the Women's Solidarity Network said in a statement that the civil society activist was collecting donations from people to rebuild schools, parks and help those in need.

The Taliban's Ministry of Public Health announced in a press conference that 72% of the people in Afghanistan's villages do not have access to primary and secondary health services.
The ministry said on Wednesday that of a total of 400 districts, only 93 districts of the country have hospitals.
The press conference of the Taliban's Ministry of Public Health was held in Kabul on Wednesday, December 25, in the presence of a number of officials of the ministry.
Officials of the Taliban's Ministry of Health said at the meeting that health services in remote areas of Afghanistan have not been properly developed in recent decades.
The Taliban's Ministry of Health said that due to the lack of hospitals in the villages, patients are referred to health centres in the provincial capital for treatment of minor problems.
Emphasising on the expansion of services in remote areas of the country, the ministry announced that a budget has been allocated by Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada for the construction of 318 hospitals in the districts, and the construction process of these hospitals will begin after the completion of the legal and administrative procedures.
According to information provided by the Taliban's Ministry of Health, there are currently 13,000 beds in the country, and with the construction of new hospitals, another 10,000 beds will be added.
The ministry also added that 27,000 professional and administrative staff are expected to be employed in the new hospitals.

In response to Pakistan's attack on Paktika, Afghanistan's permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva Nasir Andisha said that Islamabad has resorted to "coercive diplomacy" towards the Taliban.
Nasir Ahmad Andisha added that the Taliban government does not have the ability or authority to take direct revenge against Pakistan.
On Tuesday evening, December 24, the Pakistani army attacked the “centres of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in Barmal District, Paktika Province”. The Taliban confirmed the incident and said that it would respond to the attack.
Media close to the Pakistani military reported that a number of militants were killed and four of their operational centres were destroyed in the targeted attacks.
In a sharp reaction to the overnight attack by Pakistani warplanes on Barmal Paktika, the Taliban's Ministry of Defence said that it "will not leave the attack unanswered, and considers it its inalienable right to defend its territory".
Afghanistan's permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva wrote in a note on social media platform X that when Pakistan follows the first visit of a newly appointed special envoy to Kabul with an airstrike, it is called "coercive diplomacy”.
Nasir Ahmad Andisha added that the attack may have sent a message to Kandahar after the assassination of Khalil Haqqani, the Taliban's minister of refugees.

In a sharp reaction to overnight attack by Pakistani warplanes on Barmal in Paktika province, Taliban's Ministry of Defence said that it "will not leave the attack unanswered, and considers defence of its territory as its inalienable right".
The ministry said that "Waziristani refugees" were targeted in the attack.
Security sources close to the Pakistani military told reporters that the airstrikes targeted Pakistani Taliban border hideouts.
The Pakistani Taliban have stepped up their attacks on Pakistani security forces. Pakistani officials have said that the Afghan Taliban is not cooperating with the country to curb attacks by Pakistani militants.
Inayatullah Khwarizmi, a spokesman for the Taliban's Ministry of Defence, rejected the claim of Pakistani security sources and wrote on his account on social media platform X that "civilians, most of whom are Waziristani refugees", were killed in the attack.
He did not give a figure on casualties, but said that "a number of children and other civilians were martyred and wounded”.
According to the Taliban, Waziristani refugees are ordinary people in the tribal areas who have been displaced following the Pakistani army's operations. However, the Pakistani government says that dozens of TTP commanders and fighters have fled to Afghanistan and have been resettled under the protection of the Afghan Taliban in the provinces bordering Pakistan.
Asif Durrani, Pakistan's former special envoy for Afghanistan, told an Iranian media outlet on Tuesday that there are 12 key commanders of the Pakistani Taliban in Afghanistan and that the Afghan Taliban is not cooperating to disarm them.
In a warning tone about the Pakistani airstrike, the Taliban's Ministry of Defence said that "the Pakistani side should know that such arbitrary actions are not the solution to any problem”. "The Islamic Emirate will not leave this cowardly act unanswered, and considers it its inalienable right to defend its territory and privacy," the ministry added.
The Afghan Taliban has called on the Pakistani government to resolve the issue of militants through dialogue with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). However, Islamabad has refused to talk to the group, insisting on its complete elimination as a terrorist group.