Seven People Flogged In Kabul & Balkh, Says Taliban

The Taliban’s Supreme Court said at least seven people were flogged in Kabul and Balkh in the days following Eid al-Fitr.

The Taliban’s Supreme Court said at least seven people were flogged in Kabul and Balkh in the days following Eid al-Fitr.
In its weekly report, the court said the punishments were carried out between Tuesday and Thursday, March 26, against people accused of various offences.
In a separate statement, the Taliban said one person in Kabul’s Char Asyab district was flogged for an extramarital relationship.
According to the statement, the individual received 39 lashes on Thursday and was sentenced to two years in prison.
Human rights organisation Rawadari has previously reported that the Taliban carried out cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments last year, including six executions under qisas, the stoning of a woman and the flogging of 857 people.
Despite opposition from international organisations to corporal punishment and torture, the Taliban continue to carry out public floggings.

A group of politicians and representatives of anti-Taliban groups said after a two-day meeting in London that Afghanistan’s future political system must be based on the will and vote of the people, within the framework of a modern constitution.
The statement also stressed the need for broad public participation in the structure of power.
Participants also emphasised the protection of Afghanistan’s independence, national sovereignty and territorial integrity; the establishment of a citizen-centred, democratic rule of law; the protection of citizens’ rights and respect for ethnic and social diversity; the strengthening of the role of local communities in governance; and religious moderation.
According to the statement, participants agreed to adopt all of those principles as the basis for their joint work.
The two-day meeting was organised by the group Women for Afghanistan and aimed to strengthen co-ordination among Taliban opponents and create a shared framework for addressing Afghanistan’s crisis.
The chairs of the British Parliament’s defence and international development committees, the head of the UK Parliament’s friendship group with Afghanistan, and several MPs with an interest in Afghan affairs also attended and spoke at the meeting.
Britain is among the Western countries that have called on the Taliban to form an inclusive government and respect women’s rights.
The closing statement said participants underlined the importance of continuing such meetings in order to reach practical, lasting solutions based on national consensus.
Taliban border police say reports that the Torkham crossing will reopen are false and that the key Afghanistan-Pakistan route remains closed.
Obaidullah Oqab Farooqi, spokesman for the Taliban’s border police, said claims that the crossing would reopen on March 25 are incorrect and baseless.
Earlier, Pakistani sources had said the Torkham crossing would reopen on Wednesday, March 25.
Taliban border officials insist the information about reopening is not accurate.
Sources had said Pakistan was preparing to deport undocumented migrants to Afghanistan and planned to reopen the crossing.
According to Pakistani sources, the decision was made at the request of the Taliban, a claim denied by Taliban officials.
The continued closure of the Torkham crossing, one of the most important trade routes between Afghanistan and Pakistan, has had a significant impact on people’s lives and businesses.
Sebastian Gorka, deputy assistant to the US president, said efforts are continuing to secure the release of two Americans still believed to be held in Afghanistan after the Taliban freed Dennis Coyle.
Gorka said work was under way to bring home Mahmood Habibi and Paul Overby, adding that US efforts would continue until all American citizens held in Afghanistan are released.
He said President Donald Trump had promised Coyle’s sisters he would bring him home, a pledge that has now been fulfilled.
Gorka also said Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s decision earlier this month to designate the Taliban as responsible for wrongful detention was part of a process that helped secure Coyle’s release.
Meanwhile, The New York Times reported that the fate of Afghan American Mahmood Shah Habibi remains unclear.
Habibi was detained in the summer of 2022 by armed men on a street in Kabul, according to witnesses, who said the men identified themselves as Taliban intelligence agents. He was blindfolded and driven away in his own vehicle.
The report said intelligence personnel later searched his apartment, seizing his laptop, books and documents. No information about his whereabouts or condition has been made public since then.
The Taliban have repeatedly said they are not holding Habibi and have no information about him.
However, The New York Times reported that information and witness testimony shared with US officials indicate he was, at least initially, held by Taliban intelligence.
The newspaper added that it remains unclear whether Habibi is alive. His brother has repeatedly told media outlets that he believes Mahmood Shah Habibi is alive and in Taliban custody.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said calls to extend the ceasefire are primarily directed at Pakistan, insisting the group did not initiate the conflict.
In an audio message broadcast on Wednesday by Radio Television Afghanistan, which is under Taliban control, Mujahid said the Taliban is acting in self-defence and does not enter Pakistani territory. He added that protecting the population is a duty.
His remarks came after Afghan and Pakistani religious scholars called on Tuesday for the ceasefire between the Taliban and Islamabad to be extended until Eid al-Adha.
In a letter, the scholars urged both sides to extend the expired truce until May 27, marking Eid al-Adha, and to prioritise dialogue and negotiations to ensure peace.
The ceasefire between the Taliban and Pakistan, brokered by Saudi Arabia, Türkiye and Qatar, expired at midnight on Monday, March 23.
During Eid, the Taliban accused Pakistan of violating the truce. Residents in Nuristan and Kunar provinces also reported that Pakistani forces carried out mortar strikes in border areas during the ceasefire, resulting in civilian casualties.
Knowledgeable sources told Afghanistan International that the Taliban have recently detained two Polish nationals. The sources said the men had travelled to Afghanistan for business purposes.
They were reportedly planning to explore opportunities to export cars from Europe to Afghanistan. According to the sources, the Polish nationals had obtained their visas from the Taliban embassy in Qatar.
No further details have so far emerged about the precise reasons for their detention, where they are being held, or their condition.
The Polish government has not yet commented on their situation. Taliban officials have also made no formal statement about the detention of the two foreign nationals.
The development comes on Tuesday, when the Taliban released an American citizen, Dennis Coyle, after holding him for more than a year.
US officials have said the Taliban use detained foreign nationals as leverage in negotiations and as part of what they describe as hostage diplomacy.