Taliban Publicly Flogs Two People In Kunduz, Paktika

The Taliban has publicly flogged two people on charges of "moral corruption" and robbery in Paktika and Kunduz provinces.

The Taliban has publicly flogged two people on charges of "moral corruption" and robbery in Paktika and Kunduz provinces.
The Taliban's Supreme Court said in a statement on Tuesday, January 28, that it had sentenced a man in Paktika to 39 lashes and six years in prison.
The court also announced that the group's primary court in Aliabad district of Kunduz province sentenced another person to one year in prison and sentenced him to 39 lashes.
Statistics from the Taliban's Supreme Court and statements by the group's officials in various provinces show that the Taliban has publicly flogged nearly 600 people and executed six others last year.
Despite strong opposition from international human rights organisations, the Taliban has continued to carry out corporal punishment of defendants across Afghanistan.

In a letter to First Lady Melania Trump, the protesting women's movements in Afghanistan, called on her to use her power and influence to secure the rights of Afghan women.
Afghan women are living "in one of the darkest periods in Afghanistan's history", and Afghan women's lives have turned into a nightmare after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan, the movements said.
In their letter, they called on the first lady of the United States to put diplomatic and economic pressure on the Taliban, support educational programmes for Afghan girls and women, and facilitate the refugee process for Afghan women.
More than 30 women's protest organisations and movements on Tuesday, January 28, in an open letter to First Lady Melania Trump, called for attention to the situation of Afghan women and girls inside and outside the country.
In this letter, the protesting women discussed the situation of Afghan women and girls in Afghanistan under the rule of the Taliban, saying that women's human rights have been violated in this country and they have been deprived of their basic freedoms.
The letter states, "The Taliban has issued anti-women decrees banning girls' education and depriving millions of girls of their right to education. This crisis will confront the future of the country with economic, social and cultural problems."
The protesting women also expressed concern about the situation of ethnic minorities and the Taliban's repression of Hazaras, Tajiks, and Uzbeks, saying that many families have been forced to leave their homes due to these pressures.
In this letter, the first lady of the United States has asked the US to put pressure on the Taliban using diplomatic and economic means.
Supporting the education of Afghan girls through the establishment of a special fund abroad, the establishment of online schools, and the support of refugees, especially Afghan women and girls, are other demands of the protesting women.
Women's protest movements have said that the United States can ensure the safety of women's rights activists in cooperation with international organisations.
The letter to Melania Trump reads, "We, Afghan women, are in one of the darkest periods in the history of our country, the world should not forget us. We need justice, support, and global attention. You can play a key role in attracting international support for Afghan women."

On his first day in office, the new US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth reiterated support for Washington's Afghan partners.
"We stand with our [Afghan] allies," he said when he arrived at the Pentagon in response to a question about the fate of Afghan refugees eligible for transfer to the United States.
Hegseth began his work as the US Secretary of Defence at the Pentagon on Monday, US time.
In an interview with reporters, Hegseth referred to the bracelet that belonged to a US soldier killed in Afghanistan and claimed that he wears it "everyday".
Trump's executive order to suspend all US immigration programmes has put the process of relocating US Afghan allies in a difficult position.
According to the Associated Press, there are currently about 15,000 Afghan refugees in Pakistan eligible for transfer to the United States.
On Monday, January 28, CNN quoted Anna Lloyd, an official with the Task Force Argo, as saying that 3,000 Afghan refugees eligible for transfer to the United States are in a camp in Qatar and another 500 in Albania are waiting to travel to the United States. In addition, thousands more are still inside Afghanistan.
Lloyd also said that the suspension of US immigration programmes and the cancellation of foreign aid by the new US president has put Afghan refugees in third countries, especially the Qatar camp, in a critical situation.
According to the NGO Task Force Argo, Afghan refugees in camps in Qatar do not even have access to toilet paper and children's hygiene supplies.
Although Trump's US immigration programme has not been suspended, Lloyd said that most of these migrants are unable to travel to the US due to flight funding cuts.
CNN, citing two sources in the Trump administration, reported that discussions are also underway within his administration about what can be done to exempt Afghans who have helped the United States abroad from Trump's order to suspend US immigration programmes.
Outside the government, a number of US senators, pro-immigrant organisations, including the Argo and AfghanEvac Task Force, human rights organisations, and US war veterans in Afghanistan are working to resume the process of relocating eligible Afghan refugees to the United States.

The ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Kabul has said that the visit of Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to Afghanistan does not mean recognition of the Taliban government.
Alireza Bekdeli said that recognition is a legal process based on international law and has its own characteristics.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met with the Taliban's prime minister, foreign and defence ministers, as well as a number of Afghan businessmen, during his one-day visit to Kabul on Sunday. Araghchi is the first Iranian foreign minister to visit Taliban-ruled Afghanistan in the past three and a half years.
In these meetings, he emphasised that a new chapter in relations between Iran and Afghanistan will begin. However, this visit was also met with criticism inside Iran.
The Jomhouri-e Eslami newspaper wrote, "The supporters and encouragers of this trip either do not have a complete knowledge of the region and are not aware of the consequences and complications of the Taliban's rule, or they are lobbying and paving the way for the Taliban, or they are pursuing personal or group interests, and in general, they do not have a heart for Iran and Iran's national interests."
The newspaper strongly criticised the Taliban, writing, "A rebellious, violent, and backward group that lacks internal legitimacy and acceptance, and has destroyed all ethnic and religious groups and minorities, and does not respect the most basic rights of women, and does not tolerate negotiations, does it deserve a visit at the level of the foreign minister?"
In an interview with ISNA news agency, Iran's ambassador to Kabul responded to these criticisms, saying that interaction with neighbours is part of humanitarian principles.
"If there is a need for a reason for the relationship between two neighbours in the same apartment, the neighbouring countries should also look for reasons for their relationship with each other," he said.
He added that Iran's interaction with Afghanistan is based on securing the mutual interests of the people of the two countries. "The issue of recognition of the Taliban regime is a different discussion that should be addressed in its place," he said.
‘Situation of Iranian Women in Afghanistan’
Abbas Araghchi also met with some Iranian citizens during his visit to Kabul. According to the Iranian ambassador, most of the Iranians living in Afghanistan are women who are married to Afghan men and live in the country due to family ties.
Referring to the precarious situation in Afghanistan, Bekdeli said, "The economic problems caused by years of war and conflict have also affected the lives of Iranian citizens. We are trying to reduce the economic problems of these people.”
Iran has close ties with the Taliban, and in addition to expanding economic cooperation, efforts have been made to establish "intelligence channels" between the two sides. The Islamic Republic is concerned about the activities of ISIS and other opposition groups in Afghanistan, and the Taliban is also concerned about the movements of its opposition fronts in Iran.
However, the Islamic Republic has extensive influence over the Taliban government, especially in the group's leadership circle in Kandahar.
Expanding economic relations, managing border security issues, addressing the situation of Afghan refugees in Iran, combating terrorism and narcotics, and managing water resources are among the most important issues of Iran's attention in relation to Afghanistan.

Following reports of Abbas Stanekzai's departure from the country before his arrest on the orders of the Taliban leader, he said that he had no dispute with Hibatullah Akhundzada and had gone to recuperate after contracting an illness.
According to an audio file provided to Afghanistan International on Monday, the Taliban's deputy foreign minister, said that he had been "infected with a coronavirus-like disease" and that was why he had "gone to rest".
He did not mention that he left Afghanistan and went to Dubai after fearing arrest, but accused the media of spreading "false propaganda" in this regard.
Reliable sources told Afghanistan International on Monday that Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada had ordered Stanekzai's exit ban and arrest, but he was able to leave Kabul with the help of Mullah Yaqoob Mujahid, the Taliban's defence minister. Apparently, he has become angry with Stanekzai because of his harsh and unprecedented criticism of the Taliban leader.
After the publication of the Afghanistan International report, Zia Ahmad Takal, a spokesman for the Taliban's Foreign Ministry, told local media, without mentioning the report, that "there is no disagreement among Taliban officials and Stanekzai has gone to rest".
In the audio file, Abbas Stanekzai said that he was unable to personally respond to the reports due to his severe illness. He also said that he had asked the Taliban's Foreign Ministry spokesman to respond to these reports.
In the audio message, he clarified, "There is no disagreement between me and the Supreme Leader. Everything is calm."
Abbas Stanekzai's harsh and unprecedented statements against Hibatullah Akhundzada about the "un-Islamic" deprivation of women's rights have angered the Taliban leader. Stanekzai said that the closure of schools and universities for girls is unjust and illegitimate.
Speaking at a graduation ceremony for students of a madrassa in Khost Province recently, Stanekzai said that the Taliban has been "acting against Sharia" and had ignored the rights of 20 million of Afghanistan's population (women).
He strongly criticised the ban on girls' education, stressing that the Taliban's decision has no religious basis and only reflects Hibatullah Akhundzada's personal viewpoint.
He said that this decision has caused the world to turn against the Taliban.
Although there have been numerous reports of disagreements between Taliban officials and the group's leader over the ban on women's education, members of the group insist that all Taliban officials obey Hibatullah Akhundzada's orders. At least two senior Taliban officials, Sirajuddin Haqqani and Abbas Stanekzai, have warned of the consequences of the group's leader's policies, without naming him.

In a new study, the Afghanistan Human Rights Centre has warned about the expansion of the Taliban's jihadi schools, saying that these schools have had a negative and dangerous impact on the minds of young people.
The study, published on Monday, said that the Taliban had changed the school curriculum and removed key subjects.
The study, titled "Women's Access to Quality Education in Taliban-Controlled Afghanistan," said that the number of Taliban’s jihadi schools is higher than what has been officially announced.
The Afghanistan Human Rights Centre has recently been established. Sima Samar, former head of the Human Rights Commission; Farid Hamidi, former Attorney General of Afghanistan and former commissioner of the Human Rights Commission, and Musa Mahmoudi, a former member of the commission, established the centre.
According to the study, the Taliban has established many jihadi madrassas across Afghanistan since the beginning of their rule. The Taliban's Ministry of Education has announced that more than 21,000 jihadi madrassas are active in the country, but the Afghanistan Human Rights Centre has said that the number of these madrassas is much higher, based on the evidence it has obtained.
Research shows that the Taliban has built a large jihadi school in each province with extensive facilities and dormitory capacity for 2,000 people. In addition, jihadi schools have been established in district centres. For example, in Kunduz Province, four large jihadi madrassas and a total of 800 religious schools have been established in the past three years.
According to this study, 100 religious schools have been established in Khanabad district alone. This is while during the republican period, three religious schools were active in this district.
Jihadi schools are different from regular religious schools. In addition to religious lessons, jihadi madrassas also teach the Taliban's ideology and support for the group.
‘Impact of Jihadi Schools on Young Minds’
The Afghanistan Human Rights Centre is deeply concerned about the impact of jihadi schools on the thoughts and views of young people. According to the report, the Taliban is seeking to strengthen their ideological rule by increasing the number of these madrassas and making changes to educational programmes. By promoting violence and extremist thoughts, this group tries to keep society away from access to modern sciences and concepts.
The Afghanistan Human Rights Centre has warned that this trend will lead to the radicalisation of youth and the promotion of dangerous ideologies in society.
The Afghanistan Human Rights Centre has emphasised that the Taliban has been able to have a negative and significant impact on the thoughts of young people in a short period of time. These changes in the education system and the increase in jihadi schools have been aimed at consolidating the Taliban's rule and promoting extremist ideas.
‘Changes In Curriculum’
According to a study by the Afghanistan Human Rights Centre, one of the major changes in the Taliban's curriculum in girls' primary schools is that basic themes such as "socialism," in which concepts such as human rights, women's rights, peace and democracy were taught, have been removed. Some teachers have also reported that the subjects of "civic education," "skills," "art," "patriotism," and "vocational training" have been removed from the curriculum.
The research shows that the teaching hours in schools are mostly devoted to religious themes. Themes such as "Emirate Studies", "Recommendations of the Leader of the Emirate", "Principles of Jurisprudence", and "Morphology and Syntax" have been added to the curriculum.
The Taliban's ban on girls' education in public and private schools has led to the enrollment of a large number of girls in religious schools. According to the Taliban's Ministry of Education, more than 24,000 girls were enrolled in the group's religious schools in 2023.
Also, last year, more than 300,000 religious students were studying in Taliban schools, of which more than 95,000 were girls. The Afghanistan Human Rights Centre wrote that unlike schools, there is no age requirement for girls to be admitted in madrassas. However, the issue of observing the full hijab is one of the basic conditions in the jihadi schools of this group.
For the past three years, the Taliban has closed schools above the sixth grade and universities to girls. The international community has made any discussion about the Taliban's recognition conditional on the observance of women's rights, respect for human rights, and the reopening of schools and universities. However, the Taliban leader said in his latest speech that the world does not accept any of their words. He also emphasised on "jihad" and confronting the West.
However, "injustice to half of Afghanistan's population (women)," in the words of the Taliban's deputy foreign minister, has also caused internal discord among the Taliban. Some Taliban officials have sharply criticised the group's leader for closing schools and universities to girls. However, domestic and international criticism has had no effect on the positions of Taliban leader Mullah Hibatullah.
