A generationFour women were murdered in the northern city of Afghanistan, Mazar-i-Sharif, including a woman and a civil rights activist.Radical Islamic ruler in Afghanistan Taliban It was confirmed that the bodies of four women were found in a house in Mazar-i-Sharif on Saturday, and it was announced that two men had been arrested in this context. According to Agence France-Presse, these women may be lured into a trap if they want to leave the country.
Interior Ministry spokesperson Kari Sajed Chosti said in a video message: “The detainees admitted during the interrogation that they invited these women into the house.” “Further investigation is ongoing and the case has been submitted to the court.”
Asylum flight invitation report
Chosti did not provide any details about the identity of the victim. One of the relatives of the murdered woman told a local radio station that more than two weeks ago, the militant named Frozan Safi would evacuate to Germany through a third country. When they did not hear from her, they hoped that the woman had gone abroad. A women’s rights activist working for an international organization told AFP that Safi is a “very famous in the city” women activist.
According to previous BBC reports, these women wanted to leave the country at Mazar-e-Sharif Airport. Agence France-Presse learned from the activist circle that they received a call that they believed was an invitation to evacuate the flight. Therefore, they were picked up by a car and later found dead.
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The staff of the international organization said that she herself received a call from a person pretending to help her leave Afghanistan three weeks ago. But she began to doubt and stopped the caller.
Many activists have left this country
For a long time, the Bundeswehr had the largest field camp in Mazar-i-Sharif in the north of the country. The Taliban then occupied the city in mid-August.
Since the Taliban came to power in Afghanistan, many human rights activists have left the country for fear of oppression and violence by Islamists. During the first rule of the Taliban in Afghanistan in the 1990s, women were basically prohibited from participating in public life.
Heather Barr, deputy director of the human rights organization Human Rights Watch and responsible for women’s rights, recently talked about the “horrible escalation” of attacks on women activists in Afghanistan, which have intensified since the Taliban came to power. Since then, women are not allowed to return to work and girls are not allowed to go to elementary school, even if the Taliban promised otherwise.
The street protests of militants were violently suppressed, and many of them fled the country. But Islamist leaders emphasized that their fighters have no right to kill militants and threaten to punish them.



