City
Epaper

Taliban has begun to show its true colours: European think tank

By ANI | Updated: April 4, 2022 06:50 IST

Amid the continuing concern over human rights violations in Afghanistan, a European think tank said that the Taliban has in recent weeks "begun to show its true colours."

Open in App

Amid the continuing concern over human rights violations in Afghanistan, a European think tank said that the Taliban has in recent weeks "begun to show its true colours."

In a commentary published last week, the Netherland-based think tank stressed that the international community must redirect its attention to Afghanistan, where the situation has become dire.

"Whether the hardening of the Taliban's attitude towards the legitimate and basic rights of the Afghan people, especially the women, is aimed at forcing the attention of the West towards it, or whether it is in reaction to the realization that it would never be acceptable to the world in its present avatar is, however, not yet clear," said European Foundation for South Asian Studies (EFSAS).

According to the European think tank, people are being forced to sell their kidneys for as little as a couple of thousand dollars just to feed their starving children, and in which women are literally being reduced to rightless adjuncts.

"Over the past few days, girls have been banned from going to school beyond the sixth grade, women have been barred from travelling by air unaccompanied by a male relative, and men and women have been ordered to visit public parks only on separate days of the week that have been earmarked for each," EFSAS said.

This is in addition to the slew of restrictions imposed on women earlier, whereby they had been banned from many government jobs that they were otherwise fully qualified to do, told what they can and cannot wear, and prevented from travelling alone by road to other cities, the think tank said.

Several women's rights activists have been detained. In effect, within a year of seizing Kabul, the Taliban has totally reversed two decades of gains made by Afghanistan's women.

Afghan activists told Human Rights Watch (HRW) that the Taliban have increased their surveillance of individuals and groups they accuse of being "opposed to the Islamic Emirate." The threats follow a spate of attacks in which Taliban members have been abducted or killed.

The Taliban have previously carried out revenge killings of former government officials and have been responsible for forcibly disappearances or summarily executing former members of the security forces and others they accuse of being their enemies.

The statements heighten concerns that Taliban fighters in could use recent attacks as a pretext to commit abuses against perceived critics, including journalists and activists.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: European Foundation for South Asian Studies (EFSAS)AfghanistanKabulTalibanAfgTalibansTaliban movementAfghanistan talibanProminent talibanPashtun taliban
Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsTaliban Bans Chess in Afghanistan, Calling It a Form of Gambling Under Sharia Law

International"I Wish To See His End": Former LeT Member Exposes Hafiz Saeed’s Deadly Agenda

InternationalEarthquake in Afghanistan: Quake of Magnitude 5.9 Strikes Hindu Kush Region; Tremors Felt in Delhi-NCR

InternationalEarthquake of Magnitude 4.7 on Richter Scale Hits Afghanistan

Fact Check: Old Video of Afghan Fans Celebrating Wrongly Linked to India’s ICC CT 2025 Victory

International Realted Stories

InternationalOver 5,000 unaccompanied Afghan children return from Iran: UNICEF

InternationalShubhanshu Shukla leads experiment to decode muscle loss in space

InternationalIndonesian authorities to review Mount Rinjani climbing safety after Brazilian climber's death

InternationalGroup Captain Shuka works on uncovering how microgravity contributes to muscle loss at ISS on flight day 6 of Axiom 4 mission

InternationalEvacuations ordered as damaging storm hits Australia's east coast