âI was talking with a customer when I saw Taliban bring two dead bodies on the back of a ranger vehicle,â Ahmadi, a mobile phone seller, told Britainâs the Guardian newspaper. âThen they told the people that from now on this is what will happen to anyone who kidnaps people. Many started chanting âAllahu akbarâ as a crane hanged the body.â
Ziaulhaq Jalali, a Taliban-appointed district police chief in Herat, reportedly said that Taliban members rescued a father and son who had been abducted by four kidnappers after an exchange of gunfire. He said a Taliban fighter and a civilian were wounded by the kidnappers, and that the kidnappers were killed in crossfire, the Associated Press reported.
The public hangings come just a day after a founder of the Taliban said the group plans to bring back executions and amputations. Since the Taliban seized control of the country last month, world leaders and Afghans have been watching warily to see whether they will return to the harsh form of Islamic justice they ran from 1996 to 2001. The previous Taliban government held public executions in Kabulâs stadium for supposed crimes including adultery.
Last week, Nooruddin Turabi, a deputy to the Talibanâs founding supreme leader, told the Associated Press that the countryâs rulers were deciding whether they will dole out these punishments in public in the way they once did.
Turabi, who is in his 60s, ran the feared ministry of vice and virtue, which enforced the Talibanâs severe interpretation of Islam in the 1990s, and had a reputation for policing decrees strictly, beating those who had beards that were too short or were wearing insufficiently modest clothing. He is under U.N. sanctions, along with several ministers from the interim government.
Western governments have made it clear that any resumption of foreign aid is conditional on the Taliban upholding basic human rights. U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said Friday that resuming acts such as the amputation of hands and executions âwould constitute clear gross abuses of human rights.â
There have been signs of a broader erosion of human rights, too. Human Rights Watch warned on Thursday that Taliban fighters had prevented some women â including teachers and students â from moving outside their homes in the western city of Herat and ordered others to cover their faces.
When it last ruled, the Taliban barred girls from school and women from the workplace. Since it resumed power last month, some universities have imposed gender segregation and divided classrooms with curtains or boards.
âNo one will tell us what our laws should be. We will follow Islam and we will make our laws on the Koran,â Turabi said in the AP interview.