Yaqobi responded on Sunday, May 31, to recent remarks by Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid in a post on X. She said that, as a former prisoner, she could confirm that torture is widespread in Taliban-run detention centres.
Speaking to Afghanistan International on Saturday, Mujahid rejected reports of torture in prisons and detention facilities, saying that any mistreatment of detainees is prohibited under Taliban laws.
Yaqobi wrote: “My colleagues and I were among those detained for seeking justice. We were held for 41 days in the worst conditions, including solitary confinement, and experienced various forms of torture and forced confessions in Directorate 40 of the intelligence agency.”
Mujahid said: “There is absolutely no torture in prisons and such acts are completely forbidden. According to our laws, from the moment of arrest until detention and release, no torture is carried out.”
The Taliban spokesman distinguished between “torture” and “legal punishment”, saying individuals are punished only in accordance with Sharia rulings and in proportion to their crimes, not arbitrarily.
In November 2022, the Taliban arrested Zarifa Yaqobi i, a women’s rights activist, along with several of her colleagues during a press conference in the Dasht-e-Barchi area of Kabul.
Yaqobi said: “As someone who knows the conditions inside Taliban prisons, I confirm that various forms of torture exist there, and I reject the statements made by the Taliban spokesman.”
The remarks come as the United Nations Security Council reported on May 29 that Taliban officials and forces had committed sexual violence against women. The report stated that the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) documented 21 cases of sexual violence, including gang rape, against 15 women and six girls in 2025.
Zarifa Yaqobi, a human rights activist, was arrested by the Taliban following street protests in November 2022 and released after 40 days in detention.