Haqqani Says Taliban Founder Mullah Omar was Chosen to Protect Islam

Sirajuddin Haqqani
Khaama: During a ceremony in Zabul province to mark the revealing of Mullah Omar’s burial on Monday, November 7, [Sirajuddin] Haqqani stated that he was chosen to defend the Islamic way of life and system. “Amir al-Mu’minin Mullah Mohammad Omar Mujahid was chosen to protect the religion and the system,” he said. The title Mullah Omar was given is an Arabic designation for the supreme leader of the Islamic community. Typically, it is interpreted as “Commander of the Faithful.” Click here to read more (external link).
Taliban Receives More than One Billion USD as Humanitarian Aid, But the People Starve Due to Poverty
8am: … some citizens of the country confirm that they are fed up with the continued poverty and hunger in the country. These citizens say that the influx of millions of dollars in cash to Afghanistan has not had a positive impact on their lives, their job opportunities and income are still lost and no attention is paid to these areas. According to these citizens, the Taliban act in a “tasteful, ideological and ethnic” way in distributing aid and dealing with people. Click here to read more (external link).
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Women Stopped From Entering Amusement Parks In Kabul
Reuters: Afghan women were stopped from entering amusement parks in Kabul on Wednesday after the Taliban’s morality ministry said there would be restrictions on women being able to access public parks. Two park operators, who asked to remain anonymous to speak on a sensitive matter, said they had been told by Taliban officials not to allow women to enter their parks. Click here to read more (external link).
‘Beaten And Humiliated’: Taliban Cracks Down On Afghan Universities In Bid To Curb Women’s Protests
By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
November 8, 2022
Afghanistan’s universities have become a hotbed of resistance to the Taliban, with female students staging protests against the militant group’s sweeping restrictions on women.
In response, the Taliban has cracked down on several university campuses across the country, violently breaking up demonstrations and expelling students accused of political activism.
In the latest incident, the Taliban beat dozens of female students who staged a rally on October 30 outside their university in the northeastern province of Badakhshan. The incident came after a group of women were barred from entering the campus because of their appearance.
Weeks after seizing power in August 2021, the Taliban imposed a new dress code and gender segregation for women at universities and colleges in Afghanistan.
The Taliban’s Education Ministry ordered that all female students, teachers, and staff must wear an all-encompassing burqa or an Islamic abaya robe and niqab that covers the hair, body, and most of the face. Classes must also be segregated by gender — or at least divided by a curtain. Female students must be taught only by other women.
The order was condemned by activists, who said it would create fear and a culture of discrimination against women and girls.
“The beatings and discriminatory rules are aimed at preventing us from protesting and silencing the voices of women,” Nahid, one of the women who protested outside Badakhshan University, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi.
Nahid, who requested her real name not to be used for safety concerns, said protesting was the only way of preventing the Taliban from “pushing us out” of education.
She said university guards and members of the Taliban’s notorious morality police prevented them from entering the university, telling them that they were not dressed appropriately.
When the women rallied in front of the campus, chanting “Education is our right” and “Woman, life, and freedom,” the guards and Taliban morality police beat them with whips, according to videos posted on social media.
Nahid said the Taliban’s order that all female students wear the blue burqa or the black niqab and abaya was impractical and illogical.
“Where did they get this idea that women can only get an education if they wear certain colors?” she said, adding that many women in Faizabad, the provincial capital of Badakhshan, already dressed conservatively.
Students at Badakhshan University said the Taliban beat dozens of women, several of whom were knocked unconscious.
Nadia, another protesting student who did not want her real name to be used, said the violence did not deter the women from protesting and eventually entering the campus.
“We resisted and kept protesting even after we were beaten,” she told Radio Azadi. “Ultimately, we overcame the pressure and went to our classes.”
The Taliban’s morality police denied beating the students and said university staff dealt with the protesters.
The incident in Badakhshan is the latest crackdown against universities in Afghanistan.
In October, the Taliban expelled dozens of female students from their dormitories in Kabul University, the country’s largest educational institution.
The expulsions of at least 40 female students triggered protests outside the campus, with the women protesters chanting “Education is our red line” and “Silence is treason.”
The Taliban confirmed it had expelled several female students whom it said had violated university regulations, without providing further details. Protesters said those expelled were students who had participated in recent anti-Taliban demonstrations in the city.
In September, a deadly suicide bombing that killed dozens of Afghan girls and women at a Kabul educational center triggered some of the largest and most sustained protests against Taliban rule. Many of the protesters were female university students.
Following the unclaimed attack, scores of women marched through major cities to protest the Taliban government’s restrictions on women and its inability to protect ethnic and religious minorities. Many of the victims of the suicide attack were from the mainly Shi’ite Hazara community.
The Taliban responded to the protests with brute force, detaining, beating, and threatening female demonstrators.
Since the militant group returned to power, it has imposed a raft of restrictions on women, including on their appearance, access to work and education, and freedom of movement. The rules are reminiscent of the Taliban’s first stint in power in the 1990s, when the group deprived women of their most basic rights.
In the latest restriction on female education, the Taliban last month banned women from applying for many university courses, including journalism, engineering, economics, and most social and natural sciences.
In one of its first moves after retaking power, the Taliban banned girls above the sixth grade from attending school, in a move that led to widespread condemnation.
“The Taliban morality police visits various departments in the university to make sure that everyone is complying with their rules,” Lina Amiri, a student in the eastern city of Jalalabad, told Radio Azadi. “I’m always afraid of being beaten and humiliated.”
Hadia Tooba, a women’s rights activist, said the “rest of the world is obsessed with development and improving their lives.”
“But here, the authorities are preoccupied with the colors of our veils,” she said.
Written by Abubakar Siddique based on reporting by RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
Copyright (c) 2022. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Tolo News in Dari – November 8, 2022
Ghazni’s Malistan Residents Demand ‘Retributive Justice’ From Taliban for Intentionally Murdering a Student
8am: Residents of Ghazni’s Malistan district raised this request on Tuesday (November 8th) after the district governor of the Taliban admitted that they killed Mohammad Zaman Wakili, a student of a madrassa, based on an allegedly false report. A number of residents of Malistan district and the family members of the victim, in a meeting with the local officials of the Taliban, have demanded the execution of the sentence of ‘retaliation in kind’ on the murderer. Click here to read more (external link).
Hazaras in Afghanistan are at risk of more mass killings
albawaba: The Taliban’s belief in Pashtun supremacy in Afghanistan and their disdain for practitioners of Shi’a Islam, whom they consider apostates, places Hazaras at critical risk of future ethnically motivated mass killings. The Taliban famously have a saying: ‘Tajiks to Tajikistan, Uzbeks to Uzbekistan, and Hazaras to goristan’ (cemetery in Pashto). This attitude has prevailed under the new Taliban government, despite the claims of their political wing in Jalalabad that they have become a more moderate, measured group than they were in the 1990s. Click here to read more (external link).
Karzai criticizes Pakistan for mistreating Afghan refugees

Hamid Karzai
Khaama: Based on the media reports, over 1,100 Afghan refugees including women and children have been arrested and imprisoned in Sindh state of Pakistan, Hamid Karzai tweeted on Monday. The former Afghan President, Hamid Karzai has expressed his concerns about the mistreating of Pakistan’s government with the Afghan refugees and has called on Pakistan’s administration to take health approaches towards the Afghan immigrants in Pakistan and treat them based on the international laws and human rights values. Click here to read more (external link).
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‘They Torture And Kill Us’: Gay Afghan Men Fear For Lives Under The Taliban
Two gay Afghan men have told RFE/RL they live in constant fear under Taliban rule and have to meet their partners in secret. In a January report, Human Rights Watch found LGBT people in Afghanistan faced a “desperate situation and grave threats to their safety” with reports of killings, gang rapes, and mob attacks.
