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Posted: 2021-09-09 22:16:26

Two Afghan journalists were beaten in police custody this week after covering a protest by women in Kabul where they were detained by the Taliban.

Zaki Daryabi, founder and editor-in-chief of the Etilaat Roz newspaper, shared images on social media of two male reporters, one with large, red welts across his lower back and legs and the other with similar marks on his shoulder and arm.

Both men's faces were also bruised and cut in the pictures, which were verified by Reuters.

When asked about the incident, an acting Taliban minister, who was named in his post when the new government was announced on Tuesday, said that any attack on journalists would be investigated.

He declined to be identified.

Mr Daryabi said the beatings sent a chilling message to the media in Afghanistan, where an independent press, much of it funded by Western donors, has flourished in the past 20 years.

"Five colleagues were kept in a detention centre for more than four hours, and during these four hours two of our colleagues were beaten and tortured brutally," he told Reuters on Thursday, the day after the incident.

He said the injured reporters were taken to hospital and advised by doctors to take two weeks' rest.

A man shows bruises on his face and neck
The reporters were taken to hospital.(

Reuters: West Asia News Agency

)

The Taliban, who swept into the capital Kabul on August 15 and now rule Afghanistan again after fighting a 20-year insurgency against foreign and Afghan forces, have vowed to allow the media to operate and respect people's human rights.

But incidents of abuse since they came to power have raised doubts among some Afghans.

Taqi Daryabi, one of the two Etilaat Roz journalists, said seven or eight people beat them for about 10 minutes.

Reuters could not independently verify his account.

The last time the Taliban ruled the country from 1996-2001 there was no independent media and the Internet was in its infancy.

Several journalists have complained of assault since the Taliban returned to power, and some women have said they were not allowed to carry on working in media jobs.

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Under the first Taliban rule, women were banned from work and education.

The group has said in recent weeks that women will be allowed to work and attend university within the parameters of Islamic law.

"With the sudden collapse of the government, Etilaat Roz initially decided to stay and operate in the hope that there would be no big issue for media and journalists," Mr Daryabi said.

"But with the yesterday's incident, that little hope I had for the future of media and journalists in country is destroyed."

Kabul flight takes off 

The first international commercial flight since the end of the chaotic Western airlift from Afghanistan last month has departed from Kabul airport.

A large group of foreigners were aboard the Doha-bound flight, Al Jazeera television reported.

The Qatar Airways plane had arrived in Kabul earlier on Thursday carrying aid, it said.

Taliban fighters walk past a Qatar Airways aircraft at the airport in Kabul
It was the first international civilian flight since the Taliban took Kabul.(

AP: Bernat Armangue

)

Although international flights have gone in and out with officials, technicians and aid, this was the first such civilian flight since the evacuation that followed the Taliban's seizure of the capital on August 15 as foreign military forces pulled out.

"We managed to fly the first plane with passengers just an hour ago," Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said in Islamabad, thanking the Taliban for helping reopen the airport.

It marked an important step in the Islamist militant group's efforts to bring some kind of normalcy back to the country, which is facing economic collapse and a humanitarian crisis.

A US official had said earlier that 200 foreigners in Afghanistan, Americans among them, were set to depart on charter flights from Kabul on Thursday after the new Taliban government agreed to their evacuation,

Qatari and Turkish technical teams had helped restore operations at the airport, from where 124,000 foreigners and at-risk Afghans were evacuated by US-led forces in the fraught days after the Taliban takeover.

Qatari special envoy Mutlaq bin Majed Al Qahtani described the flight out of Kabul on Thursday as a regular flight and not an evacuation.

There would also be a flight on Friday, he said.

"Call it what you want, a charter or a commercial flight, everyone has tickets and boarding passes," al-Qahtani said from the tarmac, quoted by Al Jazeera.

"Hopefully, life is becoming normal in Afghanistan."

Reuters

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