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Mysterious Attacks On Afghan Activists, Journalists Raise Fears Over Free Speech Under Taliban

21st January, 2022 · admin

Journalists beaten by Taliban

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
January 21, 2022

The Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan had already left free speech and media freedoms out in the cold. A recent spate of mysterious attacks on activists and journalists has raised fears that the worst may be yet to come.

The situation took an alarming turn last week with the brutal assault of a journalist at his home and widespread efforts to track down and detain participants in recent women’s rights demonstrations.

Zaki Qais, who was a journalist for 20 years before leaving the independent Khawar TV broadcaster shortly after the Taliban seized control of Kabul in mid-August, sustained cuts and bruises to his head and neck when he opened his front gate to answer a request for help on January 15.

“Someone grabbed me by the back of my hair and another person in front of me pulled the gate toward me,” he told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi of the unidentified gunmen awaiting in front of his home in the capital. “They were pulling the gate like scissors on both sides of my neck.”

Qais was struck in the head with an unidentified object and narrowly avoided being stabbed with a knife before he was able to close the gate, he said.

Qais was unable to identify his attackers but has said he has been harassed and beaten repeatedly by the Taliban authorities and the group’s supporters. The confrontation left Qais rattled enough to go into hiding with his family.

The Taliban has not commented on the assault, which has led to demands for an investigation by media observers.

“Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers must immediately launch an investigation to identify and bring to justice those who attacked journalist Zaki Qais,” Steven Butler, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists’ (CPJ) Asia program coordinator, said in a statement on January 19.

Qais is not alone. In the past week, women who have participated in a string of demonstrations in recent months for more freedoms have been beaten and detained by gunmen.

Many of those who have avoided capture have fled in search of safety. One woman protester told Radio Azadi that she and others left their homes in the dead of night after the Taliban started to round up demonstrators on January 19, leaving some of the women in “the open air and snow.”

Tamana Zaryabi Paryani and Parwana Ibrahimkhel were reportedly arrested that night by men claiming to be Taliban intelligence operatives. The two women have participated in demonstrations in Kabul, including an “anti-hijab” protest on January 16 that was broken up when Taliban police fired pepper spray.

Three days later, a self-shot video posted on social media showed Paryani pleading for help as someone pounds on the front door to her apartment.

“Help, please, the Taliban has come to our home,” she said. “Only my sisters are home.”

There are differing reports about Paryani’s and Ibrahimkhel’s situation, with some Afghan media outlets reporting their release and others saying their whereabouts remain unknown. Some reports have suggested that three of Paryani’s sisters were also arrested.

A Taliban police spokesman publicly dismissed Paryani’s video as manufactured drama but attempts by Radio Azadi to obtain comment on the case went unanswered.

A spokesman for Taliban intelligence, meanwhile, did not confirm nor deny the reported arrests of Paryani and Ibrahimkhel, but did offer a cryptic response on Twitter.

“Insulting the religious and national values of the Afghan people is not tolerated anymore,” Khalid Hamraz tweeted in reference to the Kabul protest, during which demonstrators burned a burqa, the all-encompassing garment Afghan women have been ordered to wear by the Taliban’s religious police.

Hamraz also accused rights activists of smearing the Taliban to seek asylum abroad.

The extremist group, infamous for its brutal reign in Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001 during which it barred women from working and banned girls’ education, said upon returning to power that it would allow freedom of expression if it was within the framework of Islamic principles and national interests.

But resistance to the return of restrictive measures against women and girls — including the mandatory wearing of the burqa, orders that women be accompanied by a male relative when in public, and constraints on girls’ education — has been frequently met with Taliban violence.

Journalists covering the women’s protests have also been detained, leading to increased concerns about their safety and the future of free media in Afghanistan.

Dozens of media outlets have been closed since August, and nearly eight out of 10 journalists have reportedly been forced to find other work. Those that do remain in operation often do so under pressure and self-censorship, according to media watchdogs.

In its annual World Report 2022, Human Rights Watch said the Afghan media faces threats not only from the Taliban but also from Islamic State militants who have assassinated several journalists.

But ultimately it is up to the Taliban to protect journalists, according to Nasir Ahmad Nuri, a lawyer for the Afghanistan Free Media Support Agency.

“The Emirate group is the mastermind and in control of everything that happens in Afghanistan,” Nuri told Radio Azadi. “If they are not accountable and the situation continues like this, the media will not have security and the doors of each media outlet will be closed one after another.”

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.

Related

  • The Taliban Must Reveal Alia Azizi’s Whereabouts: Amnesty International
Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Media, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Journalists, Freedom of Speech, Life under Taliban rule, Press Freedom |

Afghanistan’s last Sikhs in a dilemma: To stay or leave

21st January, 2022 · admin

Al Jazeera: Community leaders estimate just 140 Sikhs remain in the Taliban-ruled country, mostly in the eastern city of Jalalabad and capital Kabul. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Sikhs, Life under Taliban rule |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – January 21, 2022

21st January, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Attack on Taliban Vehicle in Panjshir

21st January, 2022 · admin

8am: According to the source, a fierce clash took place between Taliban forces and members of the Resistance Front for about an hour after a roadside bomb exploded. The source added that Taliban forces arrested some youngsters in the area after the incident, taking them to an unknown location. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Taliban | Tags: Panjshir |

Taliban Fines Badakhshan Residents for Not Attending Congregational Prayers

21st January, 2022 · admin

8am: Sources confirm that the Taliban in Badakhshan’s Yawan district fined 73 people who did not attend congregational prayers 500 afghanis. Locals said the incident took place on Friday morning, January 21, at the Dasht-e Soleiman Mosque. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Everyday Life, Society, Taliban | Tags: Badakhshan, Life under Taliban rule |

Russia Worried By Afghan ‘Ethnic Strife’

21st January, 2022 · admin

Tolo News: “We are concerned over the ethnic protests that broke out in the north of the country. They were sparked by the arrest of a Taliban field commander, an ethnic Uzbek, on charges of illegal actions. We hope the new authorities will not succumb to provocations staged by destructive elements, which are aimed at fueling ethnic strife with a view to destabilizing the situation during this difficult time for the country,” she said. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, Russia-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Pashtun Taliban, Uzbeks |

Child Labor in Afghanistan’s Parwan Province Increases Since Taliban Takeover

21st January, 2022 · admin

8am: Child labor figure in Afghanistan,  especially in Parwan province, has risen dramatically since the establishment of the Taliban-led government and the emergence of poverty in the country. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Children, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: Child Labor, Taliban government failure |

Pakistan qualifies for quarter-finals after beating Afghanistan by 24 runs

21st January, 2022 · admin

Ariana: Pakistan U19 team beat Afghanistan by 24 runs on Thursday to qualify for Quarter Finals in ICC U19 Cricket World Cup 2022 in West Indies. Afghanistan team had won its first match by 135 runs against Papua New Guinea on Tuesday night. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Cricket |

Kunduz Residents Complain of Unfair and Discriminatory Aid Distribution

21st January, 2022 · admin

8am: Khanom Gul, another Kunduz resident, said she lives in a rented house, stressing that her head of household is unemployed. According to her, when she knocks on the door of the Kunduz Refugee Office to receive aid, no one includes her on the list. “People with links to the Taliban are on this list,” she added.  In some other provinces, it has also been claimed that the Taliban exclude the poor, distributing aid for their own affiliates. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Corruption, Taliban | Tags: Corrupt Taliban, Ethnic descrimination, Kunduz, Life under Taliban rule |

Norway to Host Talks with Taliban on Afghan Aid and Human Rights

21st January, 2022 · admin

VOA News
January 21, 2022

ISLAMABAD — Norway said Friday that Taliban delegates, Afghan civil society representatives and officials from “a number of allied countries” will gather in Oslo next week for three days of talks on the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan and human rights.

Acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi will lead the Taliban team at the dialogue starting Sunday, his office in Kabul said.

“They are scheduled to hold meetings and discussions on various issues with American diplomats, European Union delegates, and a number of Afghan personalities,” said Bilal Karimi, a Taliban spokesman.

Officials from Britain, France, Germany and Italy are reportedly among the participants.

The Norwegian Foreign Ministry quoted Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt as stressing the meetings Oslo is hosting will “not represent a legitimization or recognition of the Taliban.”

However, she emphasized the need for engaging with the “de facto authorities” in Afghanistan in order to help the civilian population there.

“We are extremely concerned about the grave situation in Afghanistan, where millions of people are facing a full-blown humanitarian disaster,” Huitfeldt said. “We cannot allow the political situation to lead to an even worse humanitarian disaster.”

“We will be clear about our expectations of the Taliban, particularly as regards girls’ education and human rights, such as women’s right to participate in society,” Norway’s foreign minister stressed.

The Taliban military regained power in Afghanistan last August as the Western-backed government collapsed and all remaining U.S.-led foreign troops withdrew from the country later that month after 20 years.

The change in power immediately halted international assistance for aid-dependent Afghanistan and the United States blocked the Taliban’s access to roughly $9.5 billion in foreign assets — largely held in the U.S. Federal Reserve — in addition to imposing financial sanctions on Kabul.

International donors have urged the Taliban to form an inclusive government and respect the rights of women as a condition for the release of more aid, which the group has not done.

The punitive actions have plunged the fragile Afghan economy into an unprecedented crisis, worsening an already bad humanitarian crisis in the country. The United Nations says it needs $5 billion this year to bring urgent relief to an estimated 24 million people experiencing acute food insecurity, with 9 million of them threatened with famine.

“Humanitarian assistance, while essential, is not enough. We must prevent a collapse in basic services such as health and education. We must support the livelihoods of families and communities,” Huitfeldt said.

The International Labor Organization reported this week that 500,000 jobs have been lost in Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover, saying the number could go to as high as 900,000 by the middle of this year because of the economic upheaval.

Critics say despite pledging not to re-introduce harsh Islamic polices of their previous regime in Kabul, the Taliban rulers are cracking down on human rights, particularly those of women.

Most female government employees have been prevented from returning to their jobs and most secondary schools for girls remained shuttered across Afghanistan.

Taliban officials maintain they recognize women’s rights to education and work within Sharia or Islamic law but they need funds to pay salaries to teachers and organize a safe environment for female students. The Taliban have pledged to allow all girls to return to schools in March, when the new education year begins in Afghanistan.

Related

  • EU Says It Will Establish ‘Minimal’ Presence In Afghanistan After Five-Month Hiatus
  • Taliban: European Union has officially opened its embassy with a “permanent presence” in Kabul and has “practically commenced operations.”
Posted in EU-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Norway-Afghanistan Relations |
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