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Afghanistan
WorldRussia & Central Asia

Explainer | The Taliban won. Here’s what that could mean

  • The Taliban have retaken Afghanistan after 20 years in the shadows
  • Lately, the militant group has sought to present a more benevolent image

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Taliban fighters in Afghanistan’s Laghman province on Sunday. Photo: AFP
Tribune News Service
Now that the Taliban has regained power after nearly two decades in the Afghan hinterlands, the average Afghan will face a radically different government, and lifestyle, than the one they have known since the US-led invasion in late 2001.

How will the Taliban rule? Have they changed?

When the Islamist insurgent group first came to power in 1996, they billed themselves as a corrective movement in a society mired in the lawlessness of years of civil warfare.

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Under their harsh interpretation of religious jurisprudence, women and girls were pushed almost completely out of public life and forbidden from employment and schooling. The Taliban imposed sartorial injunctions on both sexes, and mandated such brutal punishment as hand-chopping and execution by stoning – for infractions of their brand of Islamic law. They also banned television and music.

Lately, the militant group has sought to present a more benevolent image.

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“We will respect rights of women,” said Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen in an interview with the BBC. “Our policy is that women will have access to education and work.”

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