How do taliban torture




















Khatera managed to leave Kabul and arrive in Delhi to receive treatment, where she now lives with her husband and child. So, then what is left for a woman? Left to die? Women were filling up universities. It was a beautiful sight to see girls going to schools. All went down the drain in just a week. I even heard from my relatives that families have begun burning the educational certificates of girls to protect them from the Taliban.

By hindustantimes. Also read British men fighting for Taliban as it mounts offensive: Report Several videos and photos on social media show Taliban fighters beating and shooting people, including children, in provinces like Helmand and Herat.

HT could not independently verify the claims or the videos. Get our Daily News Capsule Subscribe. Thank you for subscribing to our Daily News Capsule newsletter. Whatsapp Twitter Facebook Linkedin. Sign Up. Edit Profile. Subscribe Now.

Your Subscription Plan Cancel Subscription. Home India News Entertainment. HT Insight. Sometimes we had to share them with new prisoners. Some people waited months to get theirs. No throwing or assaulting guards with any object or liquids. You will not throw anything at my guards. It was found a few times, but I always managed to get another one.

It was the phone that eventually helped the prisoners escape. As the US forces left the base on June 2 without informing the Afghan government and the Taliban intensified its military offensive, Bagram was left with little supervision. But no one came. We broke the bars with the metal plates our food was served on. After getting out of their cells, the inmates took the weapons left behind by the US Army and captured the few Afghan guards who were still left.

They eventually freed them, as well as other inmates. The corridors were full of people. It is the first time that Hamza has returned to the prison after fleeing. A prison that he never thought he would leave. He walks through the grounds of the former US airbase, where personal items of soldiers and prisoners, food and elements of armour, lie in a disordered mess and he says he is happy that he is now free. About 65 kilometres south at Pul-e-Charkhi prison in Kabul, Mullah Nooruddin Turabi sits on a chair in a prison office.

He returned to Afghanistan after 20 years of exile in Pakistan, where many Taliban officials took refugee status following the US invasion. There will be much less prisoners because we will follow the rules of Islam, humane rules. Turabi does not comment on the killing of four people during the protest in Kabul on September 10, or mounting evidence of the torture against journalists and civilians still being carried out in prisons.

When asked whether the new justice system will mirror the previous Taliban order, he answers with little hesitation. But this is public demand. If you cut off a hand of a person, he will not commit the same crime again.



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