The Return of Sharia law in Afghanistan
Talibani Group |
The Taliban has categorically denied the possibility of democracy in Afghanistan. According to a senior Taliban leader, the country can be governed by a council, whose command can remain in the hands of Haibatullah Akhundzada, the supreme leader of the organization.
Wahidullah Hashimi told Reuters that the organization would also contact former pilots and soldiers of the Afghan military forces, so that they could join the Taliban. Supreme Leader Haibatullah Akhundzada has three representatives - Maulvi Yacoub, Haqqani Network leader Sirajuddin Haqqani, and Abdul Ghani Baradar, head of the Taliban's political office. Baradar is the frontrunner in the race to become president.
Wahidullah Hashimi |
Wahidullah Hashimi has clearly said that 'Afghanistan will not be a democracy." Hashimi told Reuters, "The democratic system will not happen at all because it has no basis in our country."
The Taliban captured Afghanistan on August 15 this year. Since then, the situation there has been getting worse and worse. Afghanistan is again gone in the 1990s. The Taliban wants to get the world's seal of approval on its power, but this has not happened yet. It was August 15 when Taliban fighters armed with American weapons entered the Rashtrapati Bhavan after capturing Kabul. The picture of this re-entry of terror in Afghanistan was seen all over the world. Shortly before this, the then President Ashraf Ghani gave a short speech and left the country, leaving the public helpless. After the Taliban's capture of Kabul, the withdrawal of US and NATO forces accelerated, and finally, after 20 years, US forces left Afghanistan.
The Taliban have implemented rules that widely bar women and girls from their most basic rights, such as expression, movement, and education. These restrictions affect their other basic rights to life, livelihood, health care, food, and water. They have banned women from traveling or going to work without a male member of their household—an impossible situation for most families—and barred them from many jobs. The Taliban have denied entry to secondary schools for almost all girls.
According to Human Rights Watch, the Taliban's appalling past on human rights and their reluctance to cooperate meaningfully with international financial institutions set them apart. Foreign governments must ease restrictions on the country's banking sector to facilitate legitimate economic activity and humanitarian aid, but the Taliban must also end rights abuses and hold those responsible accountable.According to Abbasi, 'The Taliban should immediately withdraw their horrific and anti-women decision of depriving girls and women from secondary school level education. This will send a message that the Taliban is ready to reconsider its bad deeds.
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