Dec. 29,
2020
Over two
decades of conflict and politicking, Taliban control in Afghanistan has become
a patchwork of edicts and codes, with some areas seeing modest reform. But
overall, fear and intimidation remain at the heart of the militant group’s
command.
Photo: BBC News/27 February 2020
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In one
district, elders successfully lobbied Taliban fighters to open a high school
for girls. In other provinces, clinics funded by international aid groups are
now allowed to function. But in those same places, harsh, often public
punishments remain common. Torture and imprisonment are widely used for
infringements as minor as possessing the wrong SIM card.
The Taliban
is stronger now than it has been since it was forced from power in 2001. Over
the years, it has captured territory across the country and today exercises
control or influence over at least half of Afghanistan. How the Taliban governs
— and how its tactics have changed over time — provides a window into how the
group might rule if it reaches a political settlement with the Afghan
government.
Interviews
with 19 civilians living or working in Taliban territory reveal a governing
force capable of making slight changes — such as rules on beard length — to
appease local communities. But the group remains rooted in an extreme
interpretation of Islamic law that appears to leave no room for compromise with
the more liberal laws in government-held parts of Afghanistan.
Areas Of
Control In Afghanistan
Public
beatings and executions are routine inside the Taliban’s Afghanistan. And women
are almost entirely absent from public life, largely denied equal access to
education and employment. Access to health care and some education has expanded
under the Taliban, but that is largely a result of work by select international
aid groups the militants have allowed to operate.
“All their
changes are only for their own benefit,” said a 22-year-old university student
from Helmand province who has lived in Taliban-controlled territory on and off
his entire life. Like others in this article, he spoke on the condition of
anonymity out of fear of retribution by the Taliban.
“If you
start criticizing the Taliban, you are their enemy,” he said. “Nothing has ever
changed with that.”
In a
statement, the Taliban did not deny using beatings as punishment or imprisoning
civilians for minor offenses, such as using a SIM card issued by a
government-owned company. Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the group,
defended the punishments as necessary to prevent infractions and keep civilians
under Taliban control safe.
The Taliban
formed in 1994 in Afghanistan’s southern Kandahar province, imposing a
hard-line interpretation of Islamic law to quell the chaos of the country’s
civil war. In 1996, the group took control of Kabul.
Afghanistan
under Taliban control became an international pariah. The regime, largely cut
off from the outside world because of its horrific human rights record,
produced millions of refugees, plunged an already impoverished country deeper
into distress and forced more than 7 million Afghans to the brink of
starvation.
If the
Taliban assumes a share of formal power in Afghanistan — the ultimate goal of
peace talks between the militants and the government — many fear the group will
bring its draconian approach to Islamic law and use of intimidation with it.
Uneven
Justice
Balkh,
Northern Afghanistan
The
27-year-old teacher’s story of torture began with a short phone call.
The voice
was a woman he knew. They had been neighbors and childhood friends. But the
call instantly terrified him, he recalled seven months later. The woman was
married, and communicating with him, a nonrelative male, was strictly forbidden
in his Taliban-controlled district in Balkh province. He ended the conversation
as quickly as possible.
The next
day, he was summoned to a Taliban base, where he was handcuffed and led to a
cell. At the base, he said, he saw members of a family feuding with his
relatives and realized he had been set up.
“I’m an
educated man. In our society, I was somebody,” he said.
Hours or a
day passed in complete darkness, then the district governor of the Taliban’s
shadow government appeared and demanded a confession, accusing the teacher of
committing adultery with the woman who had called him. When the teacher pleaded
his innocence, the district governor beat him with a tree branch and threatened
to lynch him by dragging his body from a motorbike around the village.
He was
released two days later, after a group of tribal elders vouched for his
innocence. For weeks, he refused to leave his home, then he fled his district
completely. Only months later did he return home.
“It
destroyed my dignity,” he said. “I totally lost myself.”
Mujahid,
the Taliban spokesman, said the teacher was found having “illicit relations
with a woman, which is a punishable crime under sharia.”
“Taliban
didn’t beat him on their own, but it was a verdict of the court,” he said.
“Though it wasn’t proved that he committed adultery, he was punished to warn
him from indulging any such activities in the future."
Several of
the people interviewed by The Washington Post said they or someone close to
them had suffered torture at the hands of the Taliban. A Human Rights Watch
report published this year described the Taliban justice system as one that is
“focused on punishment and largely relies on confessions, often obtained by
beatings and other forms of torture.”
Abuse and
imprisonment are used in response to all kinds of infractions, large and small.
Sali Khan Momand, a 28-year-old tailor who also lives in Taliban-controlled
territory in Balkh province, said Taliban fighters beat his uncle with their
rifle butts on the side of the road when they found he was carrying a SIM card
banned by the militants. He was held in prison for four days.
Mujahid
confirmed that a SIM card was confiscated but did not comment on the allegation
of violence.
Muhammad,
39, an ethnic Uzbek from the Taliban-held district of Zari in Balkh, was
detained by the Taliban and punished with 109 lashes for his membership in a
pro-government militia. Like many Afghans, he goes by a single name.
The Taliban
held him for months before he was released in a prisoner swap. Once free, he
fled his home with his family and went to a desolate camp for the displaced on
the edge of Mazar-e Sharif, where nearly a year later his back still bears the
scars of the torture.
The Taliban
confirmed that he was arrested and punished.
“This is
our right to punish such people who are fighting against us and want to kill
us,” Mujahid said.
Other
civilians said they prefer the Taliban’s justice system to that of the
government. A taxi driver who lives in Mazar-e Sharif said he repeatedly
travelled into Taliban territory to obtain a ruling on a family property
dispute after government courts proved ineffective.
“The
Taliban’s process is faster than the government,” said the driver, Mubaraksha
Zafar, 38, “and there is no corruption.”
Limits
of intimidation
Logar,
Central Afghanistan
When the
Taliban swept into Mohammed Ibrahim’s district in southern Logar province
nearly 15 years ago, families locked themselves inside their homes, terrified
of the unfamiliar fighters roaming their streets. But as security steadily
improved, residents grew accustomed to the militants’ rules, and the Taliban
began recruiting locally, a move that built trust within the community, Ibrahim
said.
“I remember
those days,” said Ibrahim, 34. The Taliban was “not organized then and all the
fighters were so young.”
Over the
years, as the group consolidated its hold on the district and surrounding
areas, it developed a system for lodging complaints. One of the most
significant changes came when a group of tribal elders successfully lobbied the
militants to open a girls’ high school and allow young men and women from the
district to travel to government-held territory to attend university.
“The
Taliban realized it was in their own interest,” after considerable community
pressure, Ibrahim said. “The elders told them, if our children study
agriculture, they can return to the village and help recognize the diseases affecting
our crops.”
But the
developments in Ibrahim’s village are not mirrored elsewhere, even in bordering
provinces.
“The
Taliban are not just a bunch of thugs that don’t understand the local
dynamics,” said an Afghan researcher who studies the group and works in Taliban
territory on a regular basis.
In areas
where local community ties are strong enough to stand up to the Taliban, the
researcher said, the militants adopt a more conciliatory approach. But in
territory that lacks those ties, there is no incentive for the Taliban to move
away from strict rules and harsh punishments.
The Taliban
uses “intimidation as much as they can,” he said, “but they also know the
limitation of intimidation.”
Formalizing
Militant Rule
Helmand
And Kandahar, Southern Afghanistan
Until just
a few months ago, Kandahar was an island of government-held territory in
Afghanistan’s south, the Taliban’s traditional heartland.
That began
to change this year when the militants, emboldened by their deal with the
United States, launched offensives to expand their control in Kandahar and
neighboring Helmand.
As fighters
inched closer to Kandahar city, the provincial capital, women at a community
center in the city began reporting harassment as they traveled to and from
classes, said Maryam Durani, a women’s rights activist. She established the
center to help women from both Taliban and government-controlled territory, and
it operated for years without serious harassment, she said.
In one
recent incident, a 33-year-old mother of six taking lessons in handicrafts at
the center was tormented by young men on a motorbike.
“Why are
you leaving your home? Why are you even going to school?” they shouted. As they
whizzed past, they partially pulled off her headscarf, exposing her hair, a
deeply shameful act in the conservative village where the woman lives.
Objection
to girls’ education was a hallmark of the pre-2001 Taliban, and it appears to
be a characteristic that persists in the militants’ strongholds, despite
pressure elsewhere for change.
While local
Taliban leadership in Afghanistan’s northern and central regions have allowed
girls’ schools to operate for years, much of the country’s south had none. To
this day, not a single school for girls exists in either Helmand or Uruzgan,
both deeply conservative and rural provinces.
“The only
change in their rule is that there is more cruelty,” said a farmer from
Helmand. The 34-year-old man is from Nadali, a district controlled by the
Taliban from 2008 to 2011. Last year, it was one of the areas the militants
brought back under their command.
During the
earlier period of Taliban rule, he said, the militants were disorganized and
largely preoccupied by fighting, and rarely enforced dress codes. But after the
Taliban solidified its control of the area in recent months, its leniency
evaporated.
Fighters
now forcefully collect taxes, demand food and shelter from local families, and
issue pronouncements based on strict Islamic law over a local radio station.
“The free
will was stolen from our lives,” the farmer said. After his neighbors were
brutally beaten for denying Taliban fighters housing, he fled to the
government-held provincial capital earlier this month.
The Taliban
denied forcibly collecting taxes.
“Our
leadership has a clear-cut policy that no one should be forced to pay taxes,
but let the people do so of their free will,” Mujahid said. “The people do
support us for the last 20 years. They provide food, shelter and pay
donations.”
The
Taliban’s recent battlefield advances and consolidation of control in southern
Afghanistan are what motivated the mother of six from Kandahar to begin taking
classes at the women’s centre.
“The reason
I’m going to school is because we fear the Taliban are returning, and I want to
learn a skill I can practice when I’m not allowed to leave my home,” she said.
“Dark days are coming again.”
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Haq
Nawaz Khan in Peshawar, Pakistan, contributed to this report.
Original
Headline: How life under Taliban rule in Afghanistan has changed
Source: The Washington Post
URL: https://newageislam.com/radical-islamism-jihad/taliban-control-afghanistan-become-patchwork/d/123992
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