US slams Taliban for publicly flogging Afghan men and women

US slams Taliban for publicly flogging Afghan men and women

VOA News

The U.S. special envoy for women, girls and human rights in Afghanistan has sharply criticized the ruling Islamist Taliban for organizing public floggings of people, including women, accused of “moral crimes” such as theft and adultery.

“This is both appalling and a dangerous sign that the Taliban are becoming more defiant in showing the world that they are embracing the policies of the past,” Rina Amiri said on Twitter.

Her reaction came a day after the Taliban Supreme Court said that 11 men and three women had been flogged “for different sins, including adultery, robbery and other forms of corruption” in a football stadium in the country’s east.

The announcement noted that the punishment was administered Wednesday morning “in the presence of respected scholars, security forces, tribal elders and local residents.”

It is the latest sign of the Taliban applying their strict interpretation of Islamic law, known as Sharia, to criminal justice, and restoring polices of their previous rule from 1996 to 2001, when flogging was taking place in much of Afghanistan.

“It didn’t end up well before and it will once again take the country on a perilous path,” Amiri warned.

Earlier this month, reclusive Taliban chief Hibatullah Akhundzada ordered senior judges to apply Sharia punishments in cases already concluded. Taliban authorities have since implemented public floggings in at least two provinces for crimes such as adultery, false accusations of adultery, theft, banditry, alcohol consumption, apostasy and sedition.

The Supreme Court said about two weeks ago that 19 people, including nine women, were lashed in northeastern Takhar province for adultery, theft and running away from home. They all were lashed 39 times each, it said.

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