Informed sources, who asked not to be named for security reasons, said the vehicle was government-owned and belonged to Maulawi Ehsanullah Ehsan, the Taliban official in charge of Islam Qala customs.
It is not yet clear whether the Taliban official was in the vehicle at the time of the incident. A white Land Cruiser hit a group of young women who were walking along a street in Kabul on Sunday, 7 June.
Khalid Zadran, the Taliban police spokesman in Kabul, said nearly four days after the incident that the vehicle had hit the girls in the capital’s sixth police district, leaving at least three girls injured.
On 15 June, Zadran announced that the person responsible for the incident had been arrested. He added that the individual was being questioned and that the case was still under investigation.
In images released by the Taliban of the detained individual, his face is blurred and he is shown in the compound of Kabul’s sixth police district. The accused is standing in front of a vehicle with his hands untied.
Nine days after the widely publicised incident, Taliban spokespersons have still not provided details about the identity of the person responsible.
The Taliban police spokesperson in Kabul had said the injured were taken to hospital and that their condition was satisfactory. However, sources say two of the injured are in critical condition.
Informed sources told Afghanistan International that the vehicle involved had no license plate and had tinted windows. Images published from the incident confirm the sources’ information.
Eight days following the incident, the Taliban announced the arrest of the person responsible. The Taliban has still not explained the identity of the detained person or whether the incident was intentional or a traffic offence, leaving questions unanswered.
Vehicle in Taliban Official's Residence
Sources said that after the incident, officials from the Taliban’s sixth police district reviewed CCTV footage.
They said a review of city security cameras showed that the vehicle fled after the incident and later entered the house of a Taliban official. According to the sources, the house belongs to the Islam Qala customs chief.
Sources told Afghanistan International that the driver of the vehicle is currently being held at Kabul’s sixth police district.
Case Referred to Military Court
According to information from sources, the Taliban has suspended the Islam Qala customs chief from his post over the incident and referred his case to a military court. Taliban officials, however, have not yet commented officially on the matter.
The possible motive behind the incident is unclear, but its timing, coinciding with the suppression of women in Herat, has led to the perception that it may have been rooted in opposition by some Taliban elements to any social presence of women.
According to the sources, officials from the Taliban’s sixth police district initially avoided pursuing the matter because of the involvement of a senior Taliban official.
Informed sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said individuals acting on behalf of the Taliban contacted the girls’ families and asked them not to publicise the incident in the media.
The vehicle attack on a group of women took place at the same time as mass arrests of women in Herat. A video of the incident was widely shared by media outlets and social media activists.
Pressure on the Girls’ Families
Sources say the girls’ families have come under pressure since the video of the incident was published.
According to the information, individuals acting on behalf of the Taliban promised the girls’ families that compensation would be paid and asked them to remain silent about the incident.
The Taliban usually tie the hands of suspects after arresting them, but images show the accused man in Taliban custody with his hands untied.
Based on CCTV footage obtained by Afghanistan International, six women were walking on the street when they were hit by the vehicle.
Sources say a group of girls in Kabul were deliberately targeted by a vehicle after attending a seminar. Afghanistan International has not yet independently verified the nature of the incident. The Taliban has so far not responded to a request for comment.
The Taliban says it monitors the situation in Kabul through security cameras and does not allow vehicles without license plates to move around the city.