Taliban raises banners of tyranny against Afghans again: Music is a permanent enemy of the movement
The Afghan Taliban movement is again raising the banners of
tyranny towards the Afghan people, as it recently published pictures of burning
musical instruments on its social media accounts, claiming that music corrupts
morals.
Afghan media reported that at the end of July, the western
province of Herat witnessed the burning of a group of musical instruments worth
thousands of dollars, which included guitars, drums and pianos, as well as
loudspeakers, while the Taliban defended their position by claiming that
singing and playing music corrupt the values of Afghan society.
The BBC quoted the founder of the Afghan National Institute
of Music, Ahmad Sarmast, as saying that the Taliban seeks to exterminate the
musical culture of society and that the scenes of burning musical instruments
are only evidence of the frightening visions that the movement carries.
Hostility to music
On July 19, the Taliban organized another burning of musical
instruments and published pictures of it on its social media accounts, without noting
the location where it took place.
In October 2021, gunmen claiming links to the Taliban
attacked a wedding party in the Surkh-Rod district of Nangarhar province to
stop the music, killing two and wounding others. For its part, the Taliban
denied that the gunmen acted in the name of the movement, confirming the arrest
of two of them. The movement also banned music during its first period of rule,
which ran from 1996 to 2001.
It appears from the sequence of events and the Taliban’s
reactions, as well as what the movement has built for years in the minds of its
members, did not disappear for long behind the movement’s desire for political
appeasement under the weight of its desire for international recognition of its
new authority. With the arrival of the Taliban to power in August 2021, it was
keen to present media speeches that included a pledge to preserve human rights,
especially for women and children, stressing that its current rule would not be
similar to its first rule, because it seriously seeks to engage in formal
international institutions as well as recognition of its authority.
Taliban returns to its true face
With the passage of a few months, the movement showed a face
more compatible with its beliefs towards minorities, women, and all those who
oppose its authority.
Regarding these changes, Ahmed Ban, an Egyptian researcher
in the affairs of extremist organizations, said that what the Taliban
demonstrated immediately after they came to power falls under the item of
public relations and improving the movement’s image globally so as not to
impose an international blockade on them due to the complexities of their
previous positions, and therefore they tried to identify with modern values.
In his statement to the Reference, Ban added that the
movement did not obtain what it wanted from the international community and
what those discourses were used for, and therefore it returned to its true
faith.
Restricting freedoms and multiplying crises
The recent decisions of the Taliban affect the course of
daily life and complicate the involvement of the new authority in the
international community, which increases the country’s economic crises and
makes it difficult for international financial cooperation with the Taliban.
The Taliban had also set July 27 as a date for closing all
women's beauty salons, which will affect the economy of this sector and those
who depend on it, especially since the movement requires women not to leave
their homes without covering their entire bodies and faces, and working in
salons is restricted to women. Meanwhile, in March, the movement prevented men
from working in the field of sewing women's clothing.