Taliban Conducts Public Executions Amid Controversy

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Afghanistan's Supreme Court recently defended the Taliban's public executions after four convicted murderers were executed at sports stadiums on Friday, bringing the total number to ten since the group's return to power in 2021, according to Agence France-Presse. The executions, held before large crowds across three provinces, were justified by Supreme Court spokesman Abdul Rahim Rashid as acts of "retribution" mandated by sharia law. Rashid dismissed the United Nations' condemnation of the executions, calling it "unfair and surprising."

The UN had expressed outrage, labeling the executions as "fundamentally irreconcilable with human dignity and the right to life." The organization urged the Taliban to impose a moratorium on the death penalty, aiming for its abolition. Human Rights Watch also condemned the actions, stating they represent serious violations of international human rights law and called for accountability measures.

Public executions were a hallmark of the Taliban's first rule from 1996 to 2001, reflecting the group's stringent adherence to their interpretation of Islamic law.

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