
Escalating Moral Scandals within the Taliban; Adultery Becomes Prevalent.
Reliable reports from Khwaja Ghar District indicate that Qari Islamuddin, the deputy of the district, has been visibly arrested on charges of moral corruption.
Local sources state that the case involves a girl residing in Esfandasht, Khwaja Ghar, and that its details were so evident that initial concealment was impossible. This incident exposes a reality the Taliban have long sought to hide under the guise of “Sharia.”
Civilians emphasize that this is only one case, and dozens of similar incidents are never reported. They explain that victims of moral and sexual violence under Taliban rule fear arrest, torture, or silent elimination, preventing them from filing complaints.
Simultaneously, reports indicate that Sayyid Amir, a resident of Tagab District in Badakhshan Province and current commander of the Jowzjan Brigade, has also been visibly arrested on charges of moral corruption, highlighting the expansion of the ethical crisis across various levels of the Taliban structure.
Citizens express anger and disgust, noting that while the Taliban publicly whip and suppress ordinary people in the name of religion, their members are immersed in moral corruption, bribery, and abuse of power. Religious observers assert that the Taliban neither represent religion nor uphold Sharia but are a power-driven group that uses religion as a tool for repression, justifying corruption, and implementing intelligence agendas.
The public believes that the Taliban’s jihadist and religious slogans have lost all credibility, as the group’s actions have shown that their “jihad” serves only as a means for power, personal gain, and plundering public assets.

