Taliban authorities in Afghanistan have issued a draconian decree that makes sodomy punishable by dying and allows men to beat their wives as long as they don’t break bones or go away seen, lasting wounds.
Human rights campaigners have decried the transfer as “devastating” and warned that girls’s recourse to justice could be additional curtailed.
“The men have the right to rule completely the women,” rights activist Mahbouba Seraj informed CNN from Kabul. “His word is the word of law – that’s it.”

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The decree was issued final month however has solely just lately come to worldwide consideration after it was leaked to the Afghan rights group Rawadari, which printed it in the original Pashto. The Afghanistan Analysts Network then translated the doc into English.
The punishments it particulars have already been widespread in Afghanistan, however that is the primary time that they’ve been so clearly codified because the United States and its allies withdrew from the nation in August 2021, permitting the Taliban to return to energy.
The Taliban insists that each one its rulings are in line with Islamic Sharia regulation and have non secular legitimacy.
“If a husband beats his wife so severely that it results in a broken bone, or an open wound, or a black and blue wound appears on her body, and the wife appeals to a judge, then the husband will be considered an offender,” the code says, in accordance to the Afghan Analysts Network’s translation. “A judge should sentence him to 15 days’ imprisonment.”
The punishment for animal abuse is extra extreme. The decree says that anybody who forces animals like canine or cockerels to struggle ought to be sentenced to 5 months in jail.
The decree additionally permits a father to punish their baby for, amongst one other issues, failing to pray. The punishment for a instructor who so severely beats a pupil {that a} bone is damaged is to be faraway from their job.
Given that girls in Afghanistan are prohibited from leaving the house and not using a male guardian, activists say the brand new regulation will forestall ladies from searching for justice even in instances of extreme bodily violence. Afghanistan’s Sharia Law additionally dictates {that a} girl’s testimony is price half that of a person.
Women have seen their rights steadily degraded because the Taliban returned to energy. Women are banned from nearly all work exterior the house. UNICEF estimates that greater than two million women and girls have been shut out of training by the Taliban’s ban on them attending secondary school and college.
The UN’s high human rights official, Volker Türk, informed the Human Rights Council in Geneva Thursday that the decree was “legitimizing violence in opposition to ladies and youngsters, and warned that “Afghanistan is a graveyard for human rights.
“Afghanistan’s women and girls face extreme gender-based discrimination and oppression that amounts to persecution,” Türk mentioned. “The system of segregation is reminiscent of apartheid, based on gender rather than race.”

The decree additionally clamps down on dissent. Anyone who insults Taliban chief Hibatullah Akhundzada should obtain 39 lashes and a yr in jail, whereas anybody who “humiliates senior officials” is topic to six months’ imprisonment and 20 lashes.
Rawadari, the activist group that first circulated the decree, mentioned it was “incompatible with even the most basic standards of fair trial, including the principle of equality before the law.”
The dying penalty, too, is sanctioned for a variety of crimes.
A choose or imam could sentence to dying anybody who unfold doctrines “contrary to Islam” and anybody who “persistently” engages in theft, homosexuality, heresy, sorcery, or something aside from vaginal intercourse.
Activists say that the way in which the doctrine defines a “Muslim” leaves broad latitude for authorities to punish non secular minorities in what’s a various nation.
“I cannot tell you the number of calls I’m getting from women who are desperate all over Afghanistan,” Seraj, the ladies’s rights activist, informed CNN. “When you have these kinds of laws being implemented and the husband can decide on everything then forget it. At least before there was a fear of the courts, judges. Women would complain. Now what?”
CNN’s Kara Fox contributed to this report.