Standing to one side are three young women wearing burkas. They will kill him.
The man is their uncle. He murdered their parents and two siblings in a dispute over family honour. Their mother was committing adultery, the villagers said. Their father, the condemned man’s brother, refused to do anything. The uncle, shamed and enraged, opened fire at a car carrying the whole family.
The man has to pay for killing four people. Blood for blood. Taliban fighters help the girls to hold a heavy Kalashnikov. They are just inches from the man about to die.
“Pull the trigger,” says one of the Talibs. “It’s easy.”
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
Taliban will rule Afghanistan again, says leaked US military report
Classified document is said to warn that Pakistan is plotting to help reinstall Taliban once Nato-led forces depart
“Many Afghans are already bracing themselves for an eventual return of the Taliban,” the report was quoted as saying. “Once Isaf (Nato-led forces) is no longer a factor, Taliban consider their victory inevitable.”
The document stated that Pakistan’s security agency was helping the Taliban in directing attacks against foreign forces – a charge long denied by Islamabad.
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
It would have been great if the justice had been served through rule of law, this is utter chaos. And more than taleban this has to do with tribal culture, revenge!
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
It would have been great if the justice had been served through rule of law, this is utter chaos. And more than taleban this has to do with tribal culture, revenge!
At least justice is served. Rule of law... there' no rule of law in Pakistan, Afghanistan ki baat kartay ho.
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
Their mother was committing adultery, *the villagers said.
*
It's the same villagers who were able to sight the eid moon on 27th this year.
Shows just how much of the "justice" was served by the cult they belong to.
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
"Pull the trigger," says one of the Talibs. "It's easy."
We see here what a monster a person can become if he follows evil religiously.
i remember other such kharijis beaming with pleasure when they were discussing how they beheaded some Pakistani soldiers in the name of their cult.
I also read about similar pride being espoused by a serial killer when he was explaining in detail to a mother how he chopped her boy piece by piece while he was alive.
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
This type of justice is served in pakistan everyday, according to me it's not justice though.
Justice is served everywhere in the world, for example justice to gitmo prisoners, Afia Siddiqui, and loads of Muslim prisoners in the jails of the Christian/Jewish/Secular world.
If justice is served under universal (Islamic) laws, it is justice in the true sense, whether it's done in a supreme court full of thug lawyers and judges whose bread and butter depends on bribery or in a desert of Afghanistan or Pakistan.
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
We see here what a monster a person can become if he follows evil religiously.
i remember other such kharijis beaming with pleasure when they were discussing how they beheaded some Pakistani soldiers in the name of their cult.
I also read about similar pride being espoused by a serial killer when he was explaining in detail to a mother how he chopped her boy piece by piece while he was alive.
Khariji sect basically was an off shoot of the Shias of Ali; they fought under their first Imam in Siffeen, later on they became khawarij and killed their own infallible imam. Now don't use this world for others!
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
Khariji sect basically was an off shoot of the Shias of Ali; they fought under their first Imam in Siffeen, later on they became khawarij and killed their own infallible imam. Now don't use this world for others!
lol. Kharijis are the fore runners of Wahhabis of today. They also considered anyone disagreeing with them a kafir. They also called Ali a kafir. And kharijis considered a fasaad wajib over those Muslims who disagreed with them, and considered their women, their properties and their lives allowed to be taken in the name of their intolerent cult.
It is the same thinking followed by Taliban and other extremists. It is wrong to think that Talibanic kharijism is against shias or minority alone. Actually they have destroyed and killed many sunnis as well who don't agree with their cult.
So in reality, Talibanic kharijism is an attack of a violent religious minority cult over the majority Muslim population of Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Re: In the Afghan villages where Taliban still rule
Afghanistan has been plagued by lawlessness in the past, but we have been working with the Afghan government and training Afghan security forces to bring back the rule of law in the country. How can anyone call this “Justice served,” when a few girls are given a Kalashnikov and asked to shoot a man accused of killing their parents? The lawless Taliban have always encouraged brutality. In the interest of justice and peace it is important to support the country in enforcing the “rule of law,” so justice is served in fair and humane manner.