UN calls on Taliban to end floggings, executions in Afghanistan
UNITED NATIONS (APP):The use of corporal punishment by the Taliban authorities runs counter to international law and must stop, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said Monday.
“Corporal punishment is a violation of the Convention against Torture and must cease,” said UNAMA’s human rights chief Fiona Frazer, stressing that the UN was “strongly opposed” to the death penalty.
She called on the Taliban authorities to establish an “immediate moratorium” on executions.
In a new report, UNAMA said it had documented “a range of forms of corporal punishment” carried out by the Taliban since their return to power on August 15, 2021, after dislodging the democratically-elected government, “including lashings or floggings, stoning, forcing people to stand in cold water, and forced head shaving”. In the last six months alone, 274 men, 58 women and two boys have been publicly flogged.
According to the report, the legal system in Afghanistan is currently “failing to safeguard minimum fair trial and due process guarantees”. UNAMA warned that the Taliban’s refusal to grant licences to women defence lawyers and the exclusion of women judges from the judicial system were impacting women and girls’ access to justice.
“Corporal punishment has been defined as any punishment in which physical force is used and intended to cause some degree of pain or discomfort, however light.” The prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment was considered a fundamental principle of international law, the report reiterated.
Between August 15, 2021 and November 12, 2022 alone, UNAMA documented at least 18 instances of judicial corporal punishment carried out by de facto provincial, district and appeals courts.
“Within the 18 documented instances, 33 men and 22 women were punished, including two girls; the vast majority of punishments, for both men and women, related to adultery or ‘running away from home’ and all women and girls who were punished were reportedly convicted of such offences,” the report showed.
In general, punishments consisted of 30 to 39 lashes for each convicted person. However, “in some cases, people received as many as 80 to 100 lashes”, according to the report.