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UN accuses Taliban of killing 72 people linked to previous regime

More than 100 Afghans – former members of the security forces and others – have been killed since the Taliban came to power in August – most at the hands of the hardline Islamist group, which recruits male soldiers and suppresses women’s rights. announced today the United Nations.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Nanda Al-Nassif, explained that the report included at least 50 suspected members of the Islamic State of Khorasan Province, an ideological enemy of the Taliban, who had been assassinated or killed.

At least eight Afghan activists and two journalists have been killed since August, and the United Nations has recorded 59 arbitrary detentions and threats to its ranks, according to a briefing she gave at the Geneva Human Rights Council.

“The safety of Afghan judges, prosecutors and lawyers – especially women lawyers – is a matter of particular concern,” he added.

“I am alarmed by the ongoing reports of extrajudicial executions across the country, despite the general amnesty announced by the Taliban after August 15,” al-Nassif said.

He said between August and November the United Nations had received “credible allegations of 100 executions of former members of Afghanistan’s national security forces and others linked to the former government, of which at least 72 In most cases, “the corpses were exposed to the public.”

The United States and its Western allies have said in early December that they were “concerned” about the “summary executions” uncovered by human rights groups and called for an immediate investigation.

But the Taliban have dismissed the allegations as “unfair”.

“Life or death”

“The Afghan people today are facing a deep humanitarian crisis that threatens the most fundamental human rights,” al-Nassif said.

“This situation is exacerbated by the effects of sanctions and the freezing of reserves,” she said, warning the international community that “its political choices (…) are a matter of life and death” for Afghans.

“They will determine the course that Afghanistan will follow in the future.”

The current Taliban leaders want to gain the respect of the international community and that is why they have pledged that their regime will be different.

On December 3, the top Taliban leader issued a decree calling on the government to “take serious steps to respect the rights of women” in Afghanistan, especially with regard to forced marriages, but did not mention the right to work. or in education.

Al-Nassif described the decree as an “important sign”, but a sign “which leaves many questions unanswered”.

Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

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Source From: Capital

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