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Under The Taliban, Public Employees Must Pass Test Of Faith

8th September, 2022 · admin

Taliban militants dancing (file photo)

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
September 8, 2022

The Taliban’s Finance Ministry wants its employees to be more than number crunchers — it’s requiring that everyone in its ranks must pass a test of faith to stay employed.

A source within the ministry has provided RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi with a letter detailing orders for all employees to be given a test to gauge their knowledge of Islam. The letter, which bore Taliban stamps and insignias and was signed by officials, was delivered by the ministry’s Directorate of Invitation and Guidance.

It says all ministry employees are required to take the test, which appears to be based on a 10-page booklet that covers issues related to Islam. The booklet, which was reviewed by RFE/RL, addresses 53 topics, ranging from asking to describe the five pillars of Islam are to explaining the difference between a prophet and a messenger of God to describing the signs that Judgment Day has arrived.

Question:
What are the signs of Judgment Day?

Answer:
1. When there is a lot of sin on Earth.
2. When people disobey their parents.
3. When trust is betrayed.
4. When instruments and songs, dancing, and stomping increase.
5. When ignorant and ineffective people become rulers.
6. When ignorant people are appointed to high positions.

Question:
Regarding those who worship other things than God Almighty or who worship more than one god. What is said about such people?

Answer:
These people are called polytheists.

Question:
Is polytheism forgiven?

Answer:
No, sins will not be forgiven and will always be punished by God Almighty.

Question:
What is said about a person who does not accept God Almighty?

Answer:
He is said to be an infidel.

According to the ministry source, who did not give his name due to fears of retribution, the booklet is being distributed to employees before they take the test. One ministry employee, also speaking on condition of anonymity, wrote by text message that he took the seven-question test last week and was awaiting the results.

Finance Ministry spokesman Ahmad Wali Haqmal did not respond to questions about the test and booklet.

During its first stint in power from 1996 to 2001, the Taliban also tested the religious knowledge of state employees who were not members of the hard-line group. But this is the first time the Taliban has quizzed public employees since it regained power in August 2021.

In July, the Finance Ministry requested that female employees send a male relative to work in their stead, in keeping with the Taliban government’s decision to bar most women from working in the public sector and government. Only women in the health and education sectors are permitted to work.

The ministry said it had made the request in order to speed up processes and reduce pressures on employees.

The Taliban has repeatedly said that statements related to its extremist interpretation of Islam are not orders or policy, but should be taken as advice. It has also consistently denied claims that women as well as ethnic and religious minorities are being harassed and discriminated against.

But shortly after regaining power, the Taliban reintroduced a number of policies that harkened back to its brutal regime in the 1990s.

The Taliban closed the Women’s Affairs Ministry and announced that the ministry building would be used to house the reestablished Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. That ministry oversees the Taliban’s notorious morality police, which enforces dress and behavioral codes that require women to cover their faces and restricts their rights to move freely, work, or receive an education.

The Taliban has also targeted men. It has ordered male government employees to grow beards and wear traditional attire or risk being fired. In some areas, men have been forced to attend prayers.

While the Taliban pledged upon seizing power to form an inclusive government, there are no women in ministerial positions. Rights groups have also criticized the Taliban, a predominately Sunni and Pashtun group, for targeting religious minorities, such as Sufis and Shi’a, and sidelining other ethnic groups.

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.
Posted in Ethnic Issues, Everyday Life, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Pashtun dominated Taliban government |

Taliban Group Fails to Control Drug Addicts in Ghazni Province

8th September, 2022 · admin

8am: According to residents, Pas Hesar area in the 1st security district of ​​Ghazni city has become one of the safe havens for drug addicts. Since the Taliban regime came to power in August last year, the number of drug addicts has increased in Afghanistan compared to last year. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Drugs, Health News, Society, Taliban | Tags: Drug Addiction, Ghazni, Taliban and Drugs, Taliban government failure |

Taliban Paying ‘Incentive Money’ to Jowzjani Youths to Fight NRF in Panjshir

8th September, 2022 · admin

8am: By launching a campaign in Jowzjan province, the Taliban group is giving “incentive money” to the youths in this province so that they may fight against the National Resistance Front (NRF) forces in Panjshir province, local sources reported. Sources told Hasht-e Subh Thursday that the Taliban commanders are recruiting young people to deploy them to fight in Baghlan province in addition to Panjshir. Click here to read more (external link).

Meanwhile in Panjshir

  • Two Panjshiri Residents Arrested by Taliban in Panjshir
Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Security, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Jowzjan, Panjshir |

Tolo News in Dari – September 8, 2022

8th September, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Resumes House-to-House Search Operations in Herat

8th September, 2022 · admin

8am: The Taliban rebels have launched house-to-house search operations in this province over the last three days, local sources reported. The search operation is reportedly continuing in some areas of Herat city. Although the Taliban in Herat have stated that the purpose of this move is to ensure the safety of the people, the residents of Herat said that the Taliban are harassing the residents instead. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Herat, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban home raids |

UAE firm to manage air traffic over Afghanistan

8th September, 2022 · admin

AFP: A United Arab Emirates firm signed a contract with Afghanistan on Thursday to manage air traffic across the country as the Taliban authorities seek to expand international flights. While some flights are operating out of Kabul airport, significant extra support is needed for major foreign airlines to resume full service. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Afghanistan Air Services Contract Signed with UAE Company GAAC
Posted in Arab-Afghan Relations, Economic News, Travel | Tags: UAE-Afghanistan Relations |

Pakistan beats Afghanistan in thrilling last over

8th September, 2022 · admin

Ariana: In a dramatic finish in Sharjah, No.10 batter Naseem Shah slammed two sixes off the first two balls of the final over to seal Pakistan a win against Afghanistan in the Asia Cup. The back-to-back sixes ensured Pakistan’s come-from-behind win, but also signalled the end of India and Afghanistan in the tournament. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Cricket |

Taliban Claim Media Reform as Journalists Decry Censorship

8th September, 2022 · admin

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
September 7, 2022

Taliban leaders are touting the success of so-called media reforms which bar state and private TV channels in Afghanistan from showing programs considered indecent — such as foreign movies or songs by female singers — or any content that is critical of Islam or the Taliban themselves.

“Ninety-five percent of the visual and audio media outlets in the country have been reformed,” Hayatullah Mohajir Farahi, deputy information and culture minister in the Taliban’s caretaker Cabinet, told a press conference in Kabul Tuesday.

To implement its regulations, the Taliban leadership has set up a media monitoring office that screens every broadcast program for full compliance with strict Islamic and political preferences.

In practice, experts say, the so-called reforms amount to extensive censorship of a seriously weakened Afghan media. Among other restrictions, the Taliban have ordered female anchors to wear facemasks and headscarves when presenting TV programs.

Over the past year, at least 245 cases of censorship, detention and violence against media personnel have been reported, according to the Afghanistan Journalists Center (AFCJ), one of the few media support groups still left.

The Taliban say no journalist has died in the country since the group returned to power in August 2021. At least 10 journalists were killed in Afghanistan in 2020 and 2021, figures compiled by the Committee to Protect Journalists show, and the Taliban were blamed for some of the deaths.

“It’s good news that no journalist has been murdered in the past one year, but we should also know that more than 130 journalists and media personnel were detained and some were tortured by the Taliban in the same period,” said a representative from AFCJ who asked not to be identified for fear of reprisal.

At least three journalists, several video bloggers and a U.S. filmmaker and her producer are in Taliban detention right now.

Media law

The Taliban have annulled Afghanistan’s constitution, which modeled the country into an Islamic republic and offered protections for free media and equal rights for women. Instead, the group has declared the country an Islamic emirate with their unseen leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, as an undisputed supreme ruler.

The dilution of the country’s media law, last amended in 2019 and which offered extensive press liberties, is all but certain.

“The media law was recently reviewed by the Ministry of Information and Culture … and some amendments were made in regard to religious and cultural issues and [the draft] has been sent to the leadership for approval,” said Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban’s spokesman.

It is not clear if or when the Taliban leadership will approve the amended media law and then how the leadership will implement it.

Thus far, the Taliban’s feared intelligence agency has directly dealt with alleged cases of media violations mostly by detaining, threatening and even torturing journalists, media advocacy groups have reported.

On Tuesday, Taliban officials also announced the establishment of a media violations commission that will handle media complaints.

Unlike the media commission under the former Afghan government, the Taliban’s media commission has no female members or journalists, and no representative from the Afghan human rights commission. The Taliban dissolved the country’s only human rights commission earlier this year without explanation.

The new media commission has several officials from the Ministry of Information and Culture, media support groups and an Islamic scholar, the AFJC said.

No protests, no coverage

Among other restrictions, the Taliban have instructed media outlets to stay away from peaceful protests.

Since taking power, the Taliban have faced sporadic protests, primarily by women’s rights activists, who call for the reopening of secondary schools for girls, work opportunities and political rights for women.

“Recent protests have been illegal and therefore filming and reporting on them is also illegal,” said Mujahid, adding that protesters must seek permits from Taliban authorities before marching in the streets.

The U.N. and human rights organizations have repeatedly condemned the Taliban’s policies toward women and the press.

“The de facto authorities have increasingly limited the freedom of peaceful assembly. To disperse protests, they often use excessive force, including live ammunition, batons, whips, pepper spray and tear gas, and house raids to target protesters, thereby heightening people’s fear of reprisals for publicly expressing dissent,” a U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan reported on Sept. 6.

Hundreds of journalists and media personnel have left Afghanistan over the past year and more than 80 percent of female journalists have lost their jobs, according to media advocacy groups.

“I think the media makers and TV producers are driven by a desire to serve the public with news, entertainment, and other programs that people crave and need, especially in their current extra-difficult circumstances,” said Wazhmah Osman, author of a book on Afghan television culture and associate professor at Klein College of Media and Communication at Temple University in Pennsylvania. She spoke to VOA.

Despite prevalent risks and challenges, some 210 TV and radio stations and more than 100 publications are active in Afghanistan.

Related

  • ‘No One To Protect Us’: Afghan Journalists Who Fled To Pakistan Say Western Nations Have Abandoned Them
Posted in Censorship, Media, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Journalists, Freedom of Speech, Life under Taliban rule, Press Freedom |

UN Report Details Taliban Abuses in Afghanistan

7th September, 2022 · admin

Taliban (file photo)

HRW: Under the Taliban, the rule of law has no meaning. It isn’t even clear what “the law” is. Since last year, when the Taliban revoked the country’s constitution and stated that all laws needed to comply with Sharia, or Islamic law, it hasn’t been clear which laws and regulations are in force or how crimes are to be handled. Instead, there are only “evolving and arbitrarily interpreted rules and decrees,” according to the UN report, and legal cases “are handled idiosyncratically across jurisdictions and venues,” while basic crimes are “often dealt with by security forces without involving prosecutors or judges.” In short, “the law” is whatever a Taliban official might say it is. A situation more threatening to human rights is hard to imagine. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule |

A Taliban Member Abducts a 17-Year-Old Girl in Bamiyan

7th September, 2022 · admin

8am: A local source in Bamiyan told Hasht-e Subh on Wednesday, September 7, that 40 year old Seyeed Taqi Alavi has abducted a 17-year-old girl from Solij village of Yekavalang District No. 2 for the purpose of marriage. After the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, incidents of forced marriages with measurable age differences have increased. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Abduction, Bamiyan, Forced marriage by Taliban, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban Rapists |
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