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The recent flogging of two women in a Taliban stronghold area may have been due to the recent enforcement of strictures on the use of mobile devices, particularly smartphones, in militant-controlled areas. (illustrative photo)
The recent flogging of two women in a Taliban stronghold area may have been due to the recent enforcement of strictures on the use of mobile devices, particularly smartphones, in militant-controlled areas. (illustrative photo)

The scenes of a public flogging in a Taliban stronghold in northern Afghanistan showed two women in blue burqas kneeling nearly motionless as a man beat them over their heads and bodies with a cane.

The women, whose names have not been released, had been found guilty of breaking the Taliban's strict interpretation of Shari'a law after police said they visited a local health clinic without a male relative being present. They were also said to have been seen by Taliban fighters communicating on mobile phones.

While the fundamentalist Taliban has long forced women to be accompanied by a male relative when venturing outside their homes, reports of the second charge appear to point to the recent enforcement of strictures on the use of mobile devices, particularly smartphones, in militant-controlled areas.

It was unclear if the women, both of whom were married, were punished simply for using the phones or specifically for communicating with men outside their immediate families -- a charge that has led to public floggings in the past.

While men on mobile devices are a common sight, local conservative culture frequently frowns on women using mobile phones in public.

Fear Of Drone Strikes, Surveillance

Obaid Ali, an expert on the Afghan insurgency at the Afghanistan Analysts Network, an independent think tank in Kabul, says the Taliban's cultural commission banned all fighters from using smartphones in 2016 for security and religious reasons. Since then, Ali says, the militants have enforced the ban on civilians in some areas under their control. But he says primitive mobile phones without Internet access or the ability to record images or video are tolerated in many of those same locations, which frequently lack fixed-line telephone services.

"One of the main reasons the Taliban banned smartphones was because of the growing threat of U.S. drone strikes and surveillance," says Ali. "The Taliban also fears smartphones being used among civilians because people can access independent information, take photos and videos, and might give away the militants' activities and locations."

The Taliban has restricted mobile-phone use in most areas under its control. In parts of the southern Helmand Province, mobile phones and the Internet are banned. Taliban fighters communicate via walkie-talkies.

In the northern Kunduz Province, where Taliban fighters control several districts, the group has forced mobile service providers to switch off coverage every day between 6:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.

Brutal Punishments

It was unclear if the women who were flogged in Jawzjan were using smartphones.

The incident occurred in the Beron Sena area of the Darzab district, a former stronghold of the Islamic State (IS) extremist group, which was ousted from the area by the rival Taliban and government forces in August.

Mohammad Ismail, Darzab's chief of police, this week confirmed that the floggings had taken place and said the incident occurred about 10 days ago. He said the women had since returned to their homes.

The news of the floggings only reached mainstream Afghan media on October 28. Videos purportedly showing the punishments have since been widely shared on social media.

''Moral Crimes'

This is not the first time the Taliban, which ruled the country from 1996 to 2001, has meted out public punishments for so-called moral crimes.

In the northern province of Faryab, a young girl was publicly flogged in a market last month for not being accompanied by a male relative.

Moral offenses, including adultery or even running away from home, are not considered crimes under the Afghan Criminal Code. But hundreds of women and girls have nevertheless been imprisoned after "immorality" verdicts by courts dominated by religious conservatives.

In some rural areas, where Taliban militants exert considerable influence, residents view government bodies as corrupt or unreliable and turn to Taliban courts to settle disputes. The Taliban courts employ Shari'a law, which prescribes public flogging, stoning, or execution for men or women found guilty of having a relationship outside marriage or an extramarital affair and for women who had contact with men outside their immediate families.

Recent years have seen a spate of chilling public punishments of women accused of such offenses.

In February 2017, an armed mob killed an 18-year-old woman and the man she had eloped with in the eastern Nuristan Province.

In October 2015, 19-year-old Rokhsana was stoned to death by Taliban militants in the central Ghor Province after being accused of having premarital sex.

In November 2015, a 26-year-old Afghan woman died of her injuries after being publicly lashed, also in Ghor. She had been accused of running away from home.

In August 2016, also in Ghor Province, a young man and woman found guilty of having sex outside marriage were publicly lashed.

Local officials and farmers in the Tashkent region were forced to stand in a water-filled ditch.
Local officials and farmers in the Tashkent region were forced to stand in a water-filled ditch.

Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoev has fired a deputy prime minister, Zoyyir Mirzaev, after an RFE/RL report revealed that the powerful official humiliated farmers on a recent agricultural inspection trip to a rural area.

A statement posted on the president's website on October 29 said that Mirzaev was being dismissed "for serious shortcomings" and that one of Mirziyoev's policies was "to secure rule of law and preserve rights and freedoms for citizens."

The statement came two days after RFE/RL's Uzbek Service published a report after investigating a widely circulating photo that showed local officials and farmers in the Oqqurgon district near Tashkent apparently being forced to stand in a water-filled ditch.

The report identified the location where the incident took place as well as the identity of those present, including Mirzaev.

An Oqqurgon district official told RFE/RL on condition of anonymity that three of the six men standing in the ditch were officials of the district administration, two were farmers, and one was an elderly leader of a local community.

They were forced to stand in the ditch by several regional officials and Mirzaev, said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.

The official said the men, who were being punished for their "failure" to water local wheat fields in a timely fashion, were forced to stand in the cold water for 40-45 minutes.

The idea of the "punishment" was "to water those responsible for being unable to water wheat fields," said the official, who added that the men were then forced to run about a kilometer in wet pants.

"The men then ran and a car was following them.... I have never seen anything like that before. It was terrible," the official said.

WATCH: In another example of official misconduct caught on camera in Uzbekistan, a policeman has been fired after slapping and kicking a local baker in his shop.

Uzbek Officials Behaving Badly: Policeman Beats Baker
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The RFE/RL report prompted a range of reactions on social networks. Many Facebook users took part in flash mob, tagged #Ariqchallenge, in which they condemned Mirzaev's conduct and mocked the officials' readiness to follow orders from their superiors.

Mirzoyev, a longtime prime minister who became president after autocratic predecessor Islam Karimov's death was announced in September 2016, has said that the protection of citizens' rights is one of his priorities.

Mirziyoev has taken steps to implement reforms in Uzbekistan, where torture and other rights abuses were widespread under Karimov, and improve ties with the outside world.

In May, Amnesty International regional director Marie Struthers said that "some positive steps taken by the authorities over the last 18 months are encouraging" but that "much remains to be done to fully address the grave human rights violations of the past."

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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