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Footage posted on social media appears to show President Ashraf Ghani’s personal bodyguards dragging a civilian into a military vehicle in Herat on December 13.
Footage posted on social media appears to show President Ashraf Ghani’s personal bodyguards dragging a civilian into a military vehicle in Herat on December 13.

Video footage that appears to show a young man being pushed and then dragged by the collar into a vehicle by President Ashraf Ghani’s presidential bodyguards has sparked online debate in Afghanistan.

The video, which was uploaded on social media and was reported by various news outlets, was purportedly taken on December 13 by an unknown individual outside a venue in the western city of Herat, where Ghani inaugurated a new trade route known as the Lapis Lazuli corridor.

The video appears to show Ghani walking down from the stage and then confronting the young man, identified as Raees Zazai, inside the crowded venue hall where hundreds were in attendance.

Zazai, who reportedly had a complaint letter in his hand when he attempted to approach the president, was escorted out of the venue.

Several edits of the same video have been uploaded on social media. One shows Zazai squatting on the ground, surrounded by what appear to be bodyguards. He is lifted up by the collar by one bodyguard and pushed by another before he is hauled into a military vehicle.

Zazai’s family has said he was detained and he is being held in detention.

The president has not commented on the video or the allegations.

The incident has provoked renewed criticism of Ghani and his bodyguards on social media.

Ghani's government, which he has headed since 2014 and is often portrayed as weak and unpopular, has come under fire by the media and rights activists on several occasions in the past, including for the alleged mistreatment and beating of reporters, activists, and protesters.

"It is freedom of speech; everyone can criticize their president,” Facebook user Farid Ahmadi Marwi wrote on December 14. “These criticisms are constructive, and they should not be gagged like this."

“Freedom of speech is just an illusion,” wrote Mujtaba Mohammadi, a Facebook user, on December 14. “In this country, when you tell the truth, you will be hit.”

Bilal Sarwary, a parliamentary candidate and journalist, wrote on Twitter that the “abuse of civilians should be reserved for tyrants and despots.”

Others supported the actions of the bodyguards.

"Hooligans should be punished,” Facebook user Najeeb Watandost wrote on December 14. “These people do not know what is discipline and courtesy."

This isn't the first time the president's guards have come under criticism for their behavior.

In September 2016, footage appeared to show the president’s security detail threatening, beating, and cursing out a local journalist in the central province of Bamiyan, an incident that was condemned by human rights groups.

In May of that year, a fight broke out between the president’s bodyguards and two Afghan activists during a speech Ghani gave at the London-based Royal United Services Institute. The two activists interrupted Ghani’s address. One of them was escorted from the room by the bodyguards. The second activist was punched and dragged out of the room by another bodyguard.

A man begging in a subway in Tashkent
A man begging in a subway in Tashkent

Uzbekistan’s Senate has approved a law that criminalizes begging in public places across the country.

The December 13 vote by lawmakers in the upper house of the Uzbek parliament, or Oliy Majlis (Supreme Assembly), ratified legislation that was proposed by President Shavkat Mirziyoev in September.

The new criminal law imposes fines for begging that range from the equivalent of about $25 to $75.

Those unable to pay the fine face up to 15 days in jail for their first conviction.

Repeat offenders face punishments of up to 240 hours of community service, up to two years of corrective labor, or up to one year in prison.

The legislation also has provisions aimed at criminal groups that organize begging networks using children, the elderly, or disabled people to beg on the street.

Those convicted of leading or coordinating organized begging face up to 360 hours of compulsory public work or a prison term from one to three years.

Under the new law, begging is defined as “actively asking for money, food, and other material assets” in public places.

It specifies that the begging ban applies to streets, all public transport, or other public places such as airports, train stations, parks, markets and shopping centers, stadiums, and cultural heritage sites.

Beggars appeared in large numbers in Uzbekistan after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, but the number has declined since 2008 due to sustained economic growth.

The Borgen Project, a U.S.-based nongovernmental organization that fights extreme poverty around the world, says about 4 million of Uzbekistan’s 31 million residents now live below the poverty level.

That’s down from about 10 million people living below the poverty line in 2001, the group says, noting that about 75 percent of those below the poverty level now live in rural areas.

According to Uzbekistan’s Interior Ministry, more than 5,000 people in the capital, Tashkent, were identified as beggars during 2018 and sent to rehabilitation centers.

More than 4,000 of them were women -- and more than 3,000 of those women were begging with children beside them.

About 100 men with disabilities and 500 elderly people were identified as beggars in Tashkent during 2018.

With reporting by RFE/RL's Uzbek Service

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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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