âWe call on the Taliban to immediately cease the use of force towards, and the arbitrary detention of, those exercising their right to peaceful assembly and the journalists covering the protests,â she said.
Her comments added to the increasingly bleak picture of Taliban rule in the weeks since they took power, after initial pledges by the militants to govern inclusively and respect press freedoms and womenâs rights. An interim government named by the Taliban this week consisted entirely of Taliban members, contained no women and eliminated the ministry in charge of ensuring opportunity and rights for women and girls.
A Taliban spokesman, defending the appointments, said they were result of discussions held âall over the country.â
As it named the caretaker government, the Talibanâs harsh handling of protests was on full display earlier this week in Kabul, the capital, where activists and journalists said they faced lashings by Taliban fighters escorting marches. Among those beaten were two journalists who work for Etilaatroz, an Afghan newspaper, the outlet said on Twitter. Photos shared on social media showed their backs covered with red and purple bruises.
âThe Taliban should seek to understand the legitimate grievances of these many Afghans who fear for their futures,â Deborah Lyons, the U.N. secretary generalâs envoy to Afghanistan, said in a briefing to the Security Council on Thursday, speaking about the attacks on protesters.
Lyons also said there were âcredible allegationsâ that reprisal killings had been carried out against members of the former governmentâs security forces, despite Taliban pledges of amnesty for soldiers and government officials. âWe have received reports of members of the Taliban carrying out house-to-house searches and seizing property, particularly in Kabul,â she said.
Lyons added that she was âincreasingly worriedâ by a growing number of incidents of âharassment and intimidationâ targeting Afghan members of the U.N. staff. âThe U.N. cannot conduct its workâwork that is so essential to the Afghan peopleâif its personnel are subjected to intimidation, fear for their lives, and cannot move freely,â she said.