Taliban publicly whips 37 people, including 7 women, across multiple provinces in the past two weeks

Hamia Naderi
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Hamia Naderi
Managing Editor
Hamia Naderi (b. 1992, Badakhshan) is an Afghan journalist and human rights activist, recognized as a fearless voice for women’s rights and social justice. With over...
- Managing Editor
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The Taliban have publicly whipped 37 individuals, including seven women, across multiple provinces over the past two weeks, according to statements from the Taliban Supreme Court.

On March 11, six individuals, including one woman, were whipped between 15 and 39 lashes in Kapisa province. They were sentenced to prison terms ranging from eight months to two years for engaging in sex outside of marriage.

On March 5, four people were whipped 39 times and sentenced to prison terms of two to four years for producing, transporting, and drinking alcohol in Kabul and Faryab provinces.

On March 3, a man in Sare Pol province was whipped 39 times and sentenced to two years in prison for theft.

On March 2, seven individuals, including one woman, were lashed 39 times across Kabul, Nangarhar, and Takhar provinces accused of sodomy, possession and sale of drugs, and sex outside of marriage. They were sentenced to prison terms ranging from six months to two years.

On March 1, 19 people, including five women, were whipped 39 times and sentenced to two years in prison in Jawzjan and Kabul provinces accused of having sex outside of marriage, sodomy, and possession and sale of drugs and alcohol.

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Hamia Naderi (b. 1992, Badakhshan) is an Afghan journalist and human rights activist, recognized as a fearless voice for women’s rights and social justice. With over a decade of experience, she has documented migration, exposed Taliban gender apartheid, and amplified silenced Afghan women. A journalism graduate of Badakhshan State University, she has worked with multiple Afghan and regional outlets since 2015 and earned recognition for her bold, investigative reporting. Today, as a member of the Federation of Afghan Journalists in Exile and the Afghanistan Women’s Justice Movement, she continues to inspire and mobilize for change.
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