The Moral Police Taliban in Afghanistan has arrested men and their barbers on hairstyles and others due to missing prayers in the duration of the mosques the sacred month of Ramadan, a UN report, said Thursday, six months after the conduct of the laws came into force.
The Ministry of Vice and Virtue published laws last August that cover many aspects of everyday life in Afghanistan, including public transport, music, shaving and celebrations. At all times, the Ministry issued a prohibition of the voices of women and bare faces in public.
That same month, a high UN official warned that the laws provide an “distressing vision” for the future of the country by adding to existing employment, education and clothing code restrictions to women and girls. Taliban officials have rejected UN concerns about morality laws.
The Thorsday report, of the UN mission in Afghanistan, said in the first 6 months of the implementation of the laws, approximately half of the arrests made under “the men who did not have the length of the beard or the hairsty “
The report said that the morality police regularly stopped people arbitrarily “without due process and legal protections.”
Duration The month of fasting of the Ramadan, the assistance of men to the mandatory congregational sentences was closely monitored, which sometimes led to the arbitrary detention of those who did not appear, the report added.
The UN mission said both sexes were negatively affected, particularly people with small businesses such as private education centers, barbers and hairdressers, tailors, catering and wedding restaurants, which leads to a total reduction or loss of income and employment.
It is likely that the direct and indirect socioeconomic effects of the implementation of laws aggravated the terrible economic situation of Afghanistan, he said. A World Bank study has evaluated that the prohibition of women’s authorities of education and work could cost the country more than $ 1.4 billion per year.
But the Taliban leader, Hibatullah Akhundada, has emphasized the primacy of the Islamic Law and the role of the Ministry of Vice and Virtue in the reform of the Afghan Society and its people.
In a message issued ahead of the religious eid al-fitr festival that marks the end of ramadan, akhundzada said it was necessary “to establish society free from corruption and trials, and to myguid bading victims or harms from Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming and From Becoming’s From Becoming and From Becoming’s From Becoming and From Becoming’s from Becoming and From Becoming’s Fromcoming and becoming in the comedies and vicinity of everything.
More than 3,300 male inspectors have the task of informing people about the law and enforcing it, according to the report.
The Ministry has resolved thousands of people’s complaints and defended the rights of Afghan women, according to its spokesman Saif Ur Rahman Khyber.
This adds to “implement divine decrees in the fields of virtue of promotion, avoid vice, establish statements, avoid bad actions and eliminate bad customs.”
The ministry was committed to all Islamic and human rights and had demonstrated this in practice, said Thorsday, rejecting attempts to “sabotage or disseminate rumors” about their activities.
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