Allegations of abuses and gunfire threats by the Taliban for not wearing clothing in line with their religion between men and women are on the rise.
Increased cases of violence by the Taliban amid a scenario of chaos and panic, now members of the extremist group have charged against all men who do not dress according to their religious regulations from threats to beatings to the streets of the capital.
This time a group of young men complained that they had been whipped by extremists who detained them for wearing jeans or jeans on public roads, which according to the Taliban goes against the newly imposed dress codes and they argued this action was a crime.
The British media Telegraph, according to a new government official the regime is still deciding on the dress code by which men will be governed, meanwhile such allegations are on the rise.
Read more: Seven Afghans killed in chaos at Kabul airport
One of the new victims of the Taliban regime shared on her social media her dramatic experience as she mobilized on the streets of Kabul accompanied by a group of friends when they met a group of soldiers who accused them of missing out. respect for Islam.
According to the story two of the youths escaped while the rest of the group was beaten, received whips in the neck area and even gunfire threats.
A local media reported that over the weekend one of his reporters had been attacked for not wearing “Afghan clothing,” such as gowns covering his entire body. Other similar incidents had previously been reported in men wearing T-shirts and jeans.

Taliban fighters entered the capital of Afghanistan, Kabul, during the early hours of this August 15, pictured, the fighters sit in a vehicle along the street in Jalalabad province. Photo EDH / AFP
You may be interested in: US calls on citizens to avoid Kabul airport for “security threats”
These events continue to increase tension and fear among the people, as the Taliban would be implementing the same regulations as in the 1990s when they remained in power, in those years when not wearing religious clothing was a misdemeanor that involved hit or executed.
According to the interpretations that extremists have made of Sharia, women must wear burqa from the age of eight, with strict prohibitions to study, work, leave home without their male companion, they could represent a punishment of blows to the public until executions.
I’ll see: Challenging the Taliban, Nadia Ghulam masqueraded as a man for years to feed her family
Although the spokesman for the extremists reported that they were going to respect women and did not want them to become “victims” of Islamic law; however, numerous threats have been reported for women to quit their jobs and send male relatives to replace them.
too:
An Afghan woman gives birth on a US evacuation plane
The shocking story of a family that managed to escape the Taliban in the midst of chaos