Enforced disappearances of Taliban's opponents rising in Afghanistan
The Taliban's takeover of power in Afghanistan in August this year has given the international community serious concerns, against the background of the bloody history of the movement and its relations with radical groups.
The world is worried about how the
Taliban will treat its opponents, especially those belonging to the former
regime in Afghanistan.
Some international governments
voiced out these fears early on. This was why the international community is
slowly recognizing the Taliban government.
German warnings
On November 4, the German Foreign
Ministry expressed concern over the repression experienced by some Afghan
citizens.
Some people are also prone to killing
and persecution after the Taliban's takeover of power in Afghanistan, the
Foreign Ministry said.
It added in a report published by
the German News Agency that people in cities, as well as former government
employees, suffer from a massive restriction of their basic rights and freedoms.
These people are afraid of reprisals,
the Foreign Ministry said.
In some rural areas, it noted,
people's daily lives have not profoundly changed with the movement's seizure of
power.
It referred to reports of house
searches, arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances and executions, especially
against political opponents of the Taliban and the representatives of the civil
society and their families.
The Foreign Ministry noted that the German
Embassy in Kabul had shut down its doors since the Taliban's accession to power
in August.
It referred to the closure of the
consulates of many other countries.
Human
rights
Come December, the fears of the
international community became credible.
A spike was reported in enforced
disappearances and extrajudicial executions in Afghanistan.
This prompted the US State
Department to issue a joint statement with a number of countries to warn
against this serious problem.
The countries issuing the statement
with the US included Australia, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Denmark and Finland,
as well as France, Germany, Japan, and the Netherlands.