A United Nations report also highlights a severe restriction of human rights, in particular concerning the rights of women and that of manifesting.
Le Monde with AFP
The Taliban and their allies are charged, in a United Nations Report (UN), for killing more than a hundred former members of the Government Sphere and Afghan Security Forces and Afghans who have worked with foreign troops.
This document, including the France-Presse Agency (AFP) has consulted a copy on Sunday, January 30, also notes a severe restriction of human rights in Afghanistan since the establishment of Taliban governance in the summer of 2021 , in particular concerning the rights of women and the right to demonstrate.
“Despite the announcements of a general amnesty of former members of government, security forces and those who worked for foreign military, the Manua [United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan] continued to receive from Credible reportings of homicides, enforced disappearances and other offenses to these persons “, says this report of the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
” A social and economic system disappearing “
Since the Taliban seized Kabul on August 15, 2021, the UN mission received more than a hundred reports of killings that it considers credible, details the text, stating that more than two-thirds of These homicides were “extrajudicial homicides committed de facto by the authorities or their affiliates”. In addition, the document continues, “human rights activists and media employees continue to be victims of attacks, intimidation, harassment, arbitrary arrests, abuse and homicides”.
It is “a whole social and economic system that is disappearing”, commented Mr. Guterres, evoking the crackdown of peaceful demonstrations, the lack of women’s access to the world of work and girls at the world. Education.
No country has recognized the Taliban government at this stage. With the worsening of poverty and drought that devastated agriculture in many regions, the UN warned that half of Afghan 38 million risked a food shortage.
The Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution for a year for a year humanitarian aid to Afghanistan, without violating the international sanctions imposed on people and entities related to the Taliban.