Herat Taliban Governor Labels Detained Women ‘Psychologically Ill’

Noor Ahmad Islamjar, the Taliban governor of Herat, said compliance with the group’s dress code had been steadily declining in the province.

Noor Ahmad Islamjar, the Taliban governor of Herat, said compliance with the group’s dress code had been steadily declining in the province.
He described the women detained in Herat as suffering from “psychological and religious problems” and said authorities had been instructed to remove them from public areas.
Speaking to Al Emarah, a Taliban-affiliated media outlet, Islamjar described the detention of women over their clothing as an order from “God and His Messenger”. He claimed that some women in Herat had failed to follow the Taliban’s dress code because they had been influenced by “non-Afghan culture” while living in neighbouring countries as migrants.
The Taliban governor said the decision was implemented only after months of deliberation and years of waiting due to what he described as an urgent necessity.
“We have spent years and months considering different ways and solutions to enforce the hijab decree in Herat,” he said.
Islamjar claimed that wearing the burqa constitutes the traditional form of “Islamic hijab” in Herat. He added that, due to migration, the Iranian-style hijab has become more common and that women may move around the city wearing it, provided their faces remain covered.
According to the governor, the women targeted by the campaign are attempting to alter Herat’s “cultural, religious and historical identity”.
Islamjar also claimed that no women in Herat were detained by male officers. He said the arrests were carried out by female personnel trained in military and arrest operations.
However, videos circulated from the first day of the campaign in parts of Herat appear to show male morality police officers forcibly detaining women and girls.
The Taliban governor dismissed the footage, claiming that “all the images” broadcast by media outlets showing the arrests were fake and generated using artificial intelligence. He also insisted that no women or girls from Herat are currently being held in prison.
According to Islamjar, some of the women were disciplined by female officers and their families before being allowed to return home.
Without disclosing where the detainees had been taken, he said the women had been “advised and disciplined” in a secure location. He added that they were released after their families provided guarantees and discussions were held with relatives.