- 2021-08-18 03:58:58
- LAST MODIFIED: 2025-03-29 06:17:12
Taliban promise women's rights, security under Islamic rule

Photo Collected:
International Desk: Dhaka, Aug-18,
The Taliban vowed Tuesday to respect women’s rights, forgive those who fought them and ensure Afghanistan does not become a haven for terrorists as part of a publicity blitz aimed at reassuring world powers and a fearful population.
Following a lightning
offensive across Afghanistan that saw many cities fall to the insurgents
without a fight, the Taliban have sought to portray themselves as more moderate
than when they imposed a strict form of Islamic rule in the late 1990s. But
many Afghans remain skeptical — and thousands have raced to the airport,
desperate to flee the country.
Older generations
remember the Taliban’s previous rule, when they largely confined women to their
homes, banned television and music, and held public executions. A U.S.-led
invasion drove them from power months after the 9/11 attacks, which al-Qaida
had orchestrated from Afghanistan while being sheltered by the Taliban.
Zabihullah Mujahid, the
Taliban’s longtime spokesman, emerged from the shadows Tuesday in his
first-ever public appearance to address those concerns at a news conference.
He promised the Taliban
would honor women’s rights within the norms of Islamic law, without elaborating.
The Taliban have encouraged women to return to work and have allowed girls to
return to school, handing out Islamic headscarves at the door. A female
anchorwoman interviewed a Taliban official Monday in a TV studio.
The treatment of women
varies widely across the Muslim world and sometimes even within the same
country, with rural areas tending to be far more conservative. Some Muslim
countries, including neighboring Pakistan, have had female prime ministers,
while ultraconservative Saudi Arabia only recently allowed women to drive.
Mujahid also said the
Taliban would not allow Afghanistan to be used as a base for attacking other
countries, as it was in the years before 9/11. That assurance was part of a
2020 peace deal reached between the Taliban and the Trump administration that
paved the way for the American withdrawal.
The Pentagon said U.S.
commanders are communicating with the Taliban as they work to evacuate
thousands of people through Kabul’s international airport. It said the Taliban
have taken no hostile actions there.
Mujahid reiterated that
the Taliban have offered full amnesty to Afghans who worked for the U.S. and
the Western-backed government, saying “nobody will go to their doors to ask why
they helped.” He said private media should “remain independent” but that
journalists “should not work against national values.”
Kabul, the capital, has
remained calm as the Taliban patrol its streets. But many remain fearful after
prisons and armories emptied out during the insurgents’ sweep across the country.
Kabul residents say
groups of armed men have been going door-to-door seeking out individuals who
worked with the ousted government and security forces, but it was unclear if
the gunmen were Taliban or criminals posing as militants. Mujahid blamed the
security breakdown on the former government, saying the Taliban only entered
Kabul in order to restore law and order after the police melted away.
A broadcaster in
Afghanistan said she was hiding at a relative’s house, too frightened to return
home much less go to work. She said she and other women do not believe the
Taliban have changed their ways. She spoke on condition of anonymity because
she feared for her safety.
A group of women
wearing Islamic headscarves demonstrated briefly in Kabul, holding signs
demanding the Taliban not “eliminate women” from public life.
Rupert Colville, a
spokesman for the United Nations’ high commissioner for human rights, noted
both the Taliban’s vows and the fears of everyday Afghans.
“Such promises will
need to be honored, and for the time being — again understandably, given past
history — these declarations have been greeted with some skepticism,” he said.
Whatever their true
intentions, the Taliban have an interest in projecting moderation to prevent
the international community from isolating their government, as it did in the
1990s.
The European Union said
it was suspending development assistance to Afghanistan until the political
situation is more clear but that it would consider boosting humanitarian aid.
EU foreign policy Chief
Josep Borrell said the Taliban must respect U.N. Security Council resolutions
and human rights to earn access to some 1.2 billion euros ($1.4 billion) in
development funds earmarked through 2024.
Foreign Secretary
Dominic Raab said Britain might provide up to 10% more humanitarian aid. He
said the aid budget would be reconfigured for development and humanitarian
purposes and that the Taliban would not get any money previously earmarked for
security.
Evacuation flights
resumed after being suspended on Monday, when thousands of people rushed the
airport. In shocking scenes captured on video, some clung to
a plane as it took off and then fell to their deaths. At least seven people
died in the airport chaos, U.S. officials said.
On Tuesday, the Taliban
entered the civilian half of the airport, firing into the air to drive out
around 500 people there, said an Afghan official who spoke on condition of
anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to brief journalists.
The Taliban appeared to
be trying to control the crowd rather than prevent people from leaving. A video
circulating online showed the Taliban supervising the orderly departure of
dozens of foreigners.
The U.S. Embassy in
Kabul, now operating from the military side of the airport, urged Americans to
register online for evacuation but not to come to the airport before being
contacted.
The German Foreign
Ministry said a first German military transport plane landed in Kabul but took
off with only seven people on board due to the chaos. Another left later with
125 people.
U.S. President Joe
Biden has defended his decision to end America’s longest war, blaming the rapid
Taliban takeover on Afghanistan’s Western-backed government and security
forces. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg echoed that assessment, while
saying the alliance must investigate the flaws in its efforts to train the
Afghan military.
Talks continued Tuesday
between the Taliban and several Afghan politicians, including former President
Hamid Karzai and Abdullah Abdullah, who once headed the country’s negotiating
council. The Taliban have said they want to form an “inclusive, Islamic
government.”
The talks focused on
how a Taliban-dominated government would operate given the changes in
Afghanistan over the last 20 years, rather than just dividing up ministries,
officials with knowledge of the negotiations said on condition of anonymity to
discuss the closed-door talks.
A top Taliban leader,
Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, arrived in Kandahar on Tuesday night from Qatar,
potentially signaling a deal is close at hand.
The vice president of
the ousted government, meanwhile, tweeted that he was the country’s
“legitimate” caretaker president. Amrullah Saleh said that under the
constitution, he should be in charge because President Ashraf Ghani has fled
the country.
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