The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Exposed: How Taliban jails and tasers women – just for taking a taxi without a man

- By Claudia Joseph

AFGHAN women are being jailed by the Taliban for ‘immoral behaviour’ – including travelling in a taxi without a male relative or appearing in photograph­s with male classmates.

Scores have been imprisoned without being charged or tried in court in a shocking breach of the promises made to the outside world.

Footage taken by an undercover camera crew inside Herat’s central jail found all the women interviewe­d had been incarcerat­ed for minor infringeme­nts of strict Islamic law.

Some claimed they had been tasered and beaten, while others told how they were being pressurise­d to marry members of the Taliban in exchange for their freedom.

The footage, filmed by British Iranian journalist Ramita Navai for an ITV documentar­y, revealed dozens of women huddling in courtyards and more than 50 others locked up in nearby cells.

It comes despite promises that the Taliban had changed and its Afghan government would uphold the rights of girls and women. The documentar­y, Afghanista­n: No

‘They beat me with a gun, then held it to my head’

Country For Women, also uncovered stories of Taliban fighters abducting young girls off the street and forcing them into marriage.

One Taliban commander is said to have demanded that a father consent to his daughter’s marriage by putting a gun to his head.

The film crew found some women had committed suicide by setting themselves on fire or drinking bleach to escape domestic violence after the Taliban, which swept back into power in September last year, closed refuges and charities.

‘We’re entering a world where women are disappeari­ng, where they’re jailed without trial, their fate unknown; where girls are abducted from their homes and forcibly married; where women live in hiding, hunted and in fear of their lives and those who speak out risk imprisonme­nt,’ Navai said. ‘This is the Afghanista­n the Taliban don’t want the world to see.’

She investigat­ed the fate of Afghanista­n’s women in November for ITV’s Exposure series. She followed the story of one girl, ‘Maryam’, who dreamed of being a film director, but disappeare­d.

Navai found that she was incarcerat­ed by the Esteghbaar­at intelligen­ce service in Herat’s jail. In a letter smuggled out of prison, Maryam said her friends had been arrested for taking a taxi without a male relative. When she went to the police to help she was arrested. Maryam wrote. ‘There were three people interrogat­ing me. They kept tasering me.’ Describing how a Taliban official went through her mobile phone, she said: ‘He saw pictures of my classmates. He started swearing, telling me I’m a whore. Why else would I have photos taken with boys? They tasered me two or three times. They beat me with a gun, then held it to my head saying, “Tell the truth”.’

She and her friends were released after family members pulled strings. She then fled to a safe house. ‘I’m not sure what the future holds for me,’ she said. ‘Everything has been ruined. I don’t see much hope.

‘If I can’t leave Afghanista­n, I’ll have to find a corner and stay there and then kind of fade away.

‘If the government remains as it is there isn’t a single ray of light here, just darkness.’

Bilal Karimi, the Taliban’s deputy chief spokesman, dismissed all the allegation­s as ‘lies’.

● Exposure – Afghanista­n: No Country For Women, will be screened on ITV at 10.15pm tonight.

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Navai points to her Taliban escort. Left: Women held in Herat jail without charge
A CLOSE WATCH: Ramita Navai points to her Taliban escort. Left: Women held in Herat jail without charge

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