Taliban Ministry to probe reports of killing Panjshir civilians

By IANS | Published: October 2, 2021 09:42 AM2021-10-02T09:42:07+5:302021-10-02T09:55:07+5:30

Kabul, Oct 2 The Taliban caretaker government's Ministry of Interior has announced that it would investigate alleged reports ...

Taliban Ministry to probe reports of killing Panjshir civilians | Taliban Ministry to probe reports of killing Panjshir civilians

Taliban Ministry to probe reports of killing Panjshir civilians

Kabul, Oct 2 The Taliban caretaker government's Ministry of Interior has announced that it would investigate alleged reports of killing and torture of civil in Panjshir province, the media reported.

In a statement issued on Friday, Ministry spokesperson Qari Saeed Khosty said: "The Islamic Emirate does not allow anyone to torture anyone after the amnesty it announced. This is the policy of the Islamic Emirate. If any minor incidents happen in some places, the Islamic Emirate will try to investigate it," TOLO News reported.

The announcement came after a number of Panjshir residents reported said some Taliban members tortured civil and demanded weapons.

The TOLO News reported quoted Imam Reza, a resident of the province, as saying that five days ago Taliban members captured and released him but after hours of torture.

"The Taliban took me, beat me, tortured me and asked for weapons. I shouted that I do not have any, but they did not hear," he said.

Meanwhile in a video posted on social media, a man who claimed to be the head of the intelligence department of the Islamic Emirate in Panjshir can be heard saying that Taliban members have tortured and even killed a number of people in the province.

The Ministry is yet to confirm the identity of the man, adding that it would probe the video.

Panjshir was the last region to fall to the Taliban after they took over the country in mid-August.

In new social media footage, forces of the Resistance Front group, who used to exercise facto control over Panjshir before its fall, said they were still present in parts of the province.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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