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Afghanistan: Taliban storm home of female doctor, beat her and her family members

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The doctor, Fahima Rahmati, is a woman. That is enough as a criterion for abuse by the Taliban, given its well-documented history. The Taliban has fashioned its interim government — “the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan” — after the Iranian regime, with jihadists from Guantanamo in government. It has already gained legitimacy from the UN indirectly via funding, and open support from Qatar, Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, Hamas, China and others. The UK has indicated its readiness to embrace it if the Taliban respects “inclusivity.”

At the core of the Western willingness to accept the Taliban as legitimate is the complete blindness about what the Taliban represents: strict adherence to the literal teachings of the Qur’an and Hadith, as well as willful blindness and lack of concern about the well-being of women, infidels, religious minorities and dissidents, who are being oppressed, murdered and abused under Taliban rule. The treatment of Dr. Fahima Rahmati will be commonplace in Afghanistan as the country descends into the most barbaric form of Islamization. Recall in 2015:

a 27-year-old Afghan woman was beaten and burned alive in the very heart of Kabul by a mob of angry men. Hundreds of people watched the killing of Farkhunda Malikzada, a student of the Koran and Islamic Shari’a law, while others participated in the rampage. The mob’s outrage had been ignited by a false rumor that Farkhunda had blasphemed the Prophet Muhammad.

“Afghanistan: Female doctor in Kandahar claims beaten by Taliban,” ANI, September 13, 2021:

Kabul [Afghanistan], September 13 (ANI): A female doctor in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province has claimed that her home was stormed by the Taliban and she was beaten along with her family members and a neighbour, local media reported.

Fahima Rahmati, who is also a civil activist, said in a video clip that the Taliban have also taken her mobile phones while their raid on her home on Sunday night (local time), Khaama Press reported.

Rahmati said that she was neither a former government official nor had a weapon in her home but the Taliban wanted to take with themselves her brothers.

Provincial officials in Kandahar province said that they are not aware of the raid and will investigate the case and bring to justice the culprits, Khaama Press reported.

Fahima Rahmati is a local doctor and is running a charity foundation in Kandhar province and helping poor families.

“Two of my brothers are still missing, I hope the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will hear my voice, my two brothers, my brother-in-law and two brothers-in-law of my sister are still missing, where are they and with whom are they?” Khaama Press quoted Rahmati as saying….

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