Notice posted on salons in southern Helmand province warned that hairdressers must follow Sharia law for haircuts and beards and that “no one has a right to complain,” according to the BBC.
All Barbers in
Afghanistan’s Helmand province have been banned from shaving or trimming
beards, according to reports
Taliban
religious police say it breaches their interpretation of Islamic law and anyone
violating the rule will be punished, according to the BBC.
Barbers in the
capital Kabul say they also received similar orders.
The
instructions suggest a return to the strict rulings the Taliban adhered to when
previously in power from 1996 to 2001.
Since that time
clean-shaven looks have become popular and Afghan men have frequented salons
for fashionable cuts.
Since taking
power last month, the Taliban have carried out harsh punishments on opponents.
On Saturday,
Taliban authorities in the western Afghan city of Herat killed four alleged
kidnappers and hung their bodies up in public to deter others, a local
government official said.
In an interview
with the Associated Press published this week, senior Taliban figure Mullah
Nooruddin Turabi said the group would restore punishments like amputations and
executions to deter criminals.
Despite
international condemnation, the Taliban have said they will continue to impose
swift and severe punishments on lawbreakers to stop crimes like robbery, murder
and kidnapping that had become widespread in Afghanistan.

No comments:
Post a Comment