KHOST: The Afghan Taliban have imposed a ban on video interviews of government officials in Khost province, according to local media reports.

According to the sources that were quoted by the Afghan media, the department that is responsible for the promotion of good and prevention of vice has given instructions to the press officers and spokespersons of the government departments that they should not give video interviews to the media.

The directive not only prohibits video interviews but also restricts the publication of photos and videos from official meetings of government offices.

On Tuesday, spokespersons for the Khost Governor’s Office and the provincial police command informed local media that, following the ministry’s orders, they would no longer provide live images or video footage.

In recent days, both offices have also stopped posting photographs on social media platforms. Khost is now the 24th province in Afghanistan where the Taliban have formally restricted the dissemination of images and videos of officials.

Taliban impose new ban on women at key Afghan-Uzbek border market

The Taliban have imposed a new restriction on women by banning their entry without a male guardian (mahram) into a joint border market established between Afghanistan and Uzbekistan, according to local and international media reports.

The market is located in Hairatan, a border area of Afghanistan’s northern Balkh province, and serves as a shared commercial and public space for people from both countries. It has traditionally been frequented by a large number of women for shopping, trade, and travel-related purposes.

Under the new directive, Taliban security personnel stationed at the market have begun preventing women from entering unless they are accompanied by a male guardian. Eyewitnesses reported that women arriving alone are being turned away at entry points.

Reports further indicate that even women accompanied by men are being stopped and asked to provide documentary proof confirming that the accompanying male is a legitimate mahram. In cases where such proof is not presented, both the women and the men are denied access to the market.

Taliban members have been charged by local inhabitants with maltreatment and making them feel small, especially in the case of men who were with the women. Sometimes, some of the people who lived there remarked that the Afghans’ treatment at the border market was harsher than that of the Uzbeks.

This Afghan man from the locality told the reporters that the people who try to go to the market or cross the border are often subjected to multiple checks, pressure and humiliation.

The locals pointed out that the majority of women who come to the market are aged and many of them go to Uzbekistan and Russia for medical reasons thus, the prohibition is especially hard for them.

Taliban officials have not yet provided any official account or thorough explanation regarding the policy or its legal grounding. The latest incident has once more brought to the fore the issue of the increasing restrictions on women’s freedom of movement and access to public spaces in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.

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