Taliban storm Kabul apartment, arrest women activist, her sisters

 

Taliban storm Kabul apartment, arrest women activist, her sisters

KABUL: The Taliban raged a condo in Kabul, crushing the entryway in and capturing a lady rights extremist and her three sisters, an onlooker said Thursday. A Taliban articulation seemed to pin the occurrence on a new ladies' dissent, saying offending Afghan qualities will never again be endured, revealed American news organization.


The extremist, Tamana Zaryabi Paryani, was among around 25 ladies who partook in an enemy of Taliban challenge the necessary Islamic headscarf, or hijab, for ladies. An individual from the local who saw the capture said around 10 equipped men, professing to be from the Taliban insight office, completed the assault on Wednesday night.


Presently before she and her sisters were removed, film of Paryani was posted via online media, showing her terrified and winded and shouting for help, saying the Taliban were beating on her entryway.


"Help please, the Taliban have come to our home. Just my sisters are home," she is heard saying in the recording. There are other female voices behind the scenes, crying. "I can't open the entryway. Kindly assistance!"


The recording from the scene on Thursday showed the condo's front entryway, made of metal and painted ruddy brown, imprinted and left somewhat partially open. The inhabitants of an adjoining loft ran inside their home, not having any desire to converse with correspondents. An external security entryway of steel braces was closed and latched, making it difficult to enter Paryani's loft.


The observer said the attack occurred around 8 pm. The outfitted men went up to the third floor of the Kabul high rise where Paryani resides and started beating on the front entryway requesting her to open the entryway.


At the point when she declined, they kicked the entryway over and over until it opened, the observer said. "They removed four females, every one of them were sisters," the observer said, adding that one of the four


was Paryani, the lobbyist. The observer talked on state of secrecy, dreading Taliban backlash.


The representative for the Taliban-designated police in Kabul, Gen. Mobin Khan, tweeted that Paryani's social video post was a fabricated show. A representative for the Taliban insight, Khalid Hamraz, would neither affirm nor deny the arrest.However, he tweeted that "offending the strict and public upsides of the Afghan public isn't endured any longer" - a reference to Sunday's dissent during which the nonconformists seemed to consume a white burqa, the comprehensive customary head-to-toe female piece of clothing that main leaves a lattice opening for the eyes.

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