Nearly 400 civilians killed in Afghanistan since Taliban takeover, UN says
Nearly 400 civilians have been killed in attacks in Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover, more than 80 percent by a group affiliated to Islamic State, a U.N. report shows, underscoring the scale of the insurgency faced by the new rulers. It is the first major human rights report since the Taliban seized power from the former U.S.-backed government in August in a move that triggered deep concerns about a broader rollback of rights for women, journalists and others.
Nearly 400 civilians have been killed in attacks in Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover, more than 80 percent by a group affiliated to Islamic State, a U.N. report shows, underscoring the scale of the insurgency faced by the new rulers.
It is the first major human rights report since the Taliban seized power from the former U.S.-backed government in August in a move that triggered deep concerns about a broader rollback of rights for women, journalists and others. It covers the period from August 2021-end February and said that 397 civilians were killed mostly in a series of attacks by the Islamic State Khorasan (ISIS-K).
More than 50 people with suspected ties to the extreme militant group had been killed in the same period, it said, with some tortured and beheaded and cast by the roadside. "...The human rights situation for many Afghans is of profound concern," said Michelle Bachelet, High Commissioner for Human Rights, in a speech introducing the report to the top rights body in Geneva.
ISIS-K, which first appeared in eastern Afghanistan in late 2014, is thought to have spread in the wake of the Taliban takeover and is blamed for several suicide attacks in recent months, including one at Kabul airport last August. In the same speech, Bachelet said that Taliban rulers had curtailed women's rights and freedoms. She called for women to be allowed to "fully participate" in public life.
Bachelet also referred to "a number of disturbing cases of enforced disappearances" of civil society activists and protesters and expressed concerns about restrictions on freedom of expression. "I remain concerned by the progressive erosion of civic space," she said.
Under their previous rule from 1996 to 2001, the hardline Islamist Taliban barred women and girls from education. They say they have since changed.
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