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Return Of Taliban Punishment: Kidnappers Shot Publicly

Return of Taliban punishment: Kidnappers shot publicly, dead bodies hung for hours at the crossroads.

Evidence of the return of Taliban punishment in Afghanistan surfaced in Herat on Saturday.

In fact, in order to create fear among the people, the Taliban police shot dead the four accused of kidnapping and left the dead bodies hanging at various squares of the city.

The dead body hanging for hours with the help of a crane.

At various intersections in western Afghanistan’s Herat province, Taliban police shot and killed four people.

First at the city’s main square, and then hanging the four bodies with cranes on the crossroads in the middle of the road for hours.

Please tell that all four were accused of kidnapping.

According to the AP, Wazir Ahmed Siddiqui, an eyewitness from the city of Herat, told that four alleged Taliban police brought four bodies to the crossroads and one was hung with the help of a crane.

This dead body remained hanging in the air for hours. A placard was also hanging around the neck of the deceased.

Something was written on it in the Pashto language. The remaining three bodies were hanged by the Taliban at another crossroads in Herat.

Actually, a businessman and his son were kidnapped.

Herat deputy governor Molvi Sher Ahmad Emar told that Taliban fighters were chasing kidnappers and in this sequence, a clash broke out between the two and all the accused were killed.

The Taliban publicly punished this kind of crime so that this type of crime does not happen again.

Taliban will continue such punishment.

Regarding such action, the Taliban say that such punishment is necessary to instill fear and fear in the minds of people for wrongdoing.

The Taliban will continue such punishments so that people think a thousand times before committing wrongdoing.

The Wazir told that punishment should be given for wrongdoing. But such an inhuman way is not right for humanity.

Siddiqui says, in Afghanistan, the 90s have once again returned when people used to tremble with fear of the Taliban.

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