Taliban announces internet ban in northern Afghanistan 'to prevent immoral activities'

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It is the first such ban since the 2021 return to power by the hardline Islamist movement, which has voiced concern over pornography and flirtation between men and women online.
AFGHANISTAN-POLITICS-VOTE
The Taliban have previously voiced concern over pornography and flirtation between men and women online.Shah Marai / AFP via Getty Images file

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban administration on Wednesday announced an internet ban across a swath of northern Afghanistan “to prevent immoral activities,” provincial government statements said.

The hardline Islamist movement has previously voiced concern over pornography and flirtation between men and women online.

It is the first such internet ban since the Taliban took over Afghanistan in 2021, though it has announced other measures including stopping girls going to high school and women working in many different fields.

The ban will cover five provinces — Kunduz, Badakhshan, Baghlan, Takhar and Balkh — in the north of the country, which encompasses the population centers of the region.

The restriction is limited to all internet connections via fiber optic cable, officials said. Internet access on cell phone data, however, will be available, they said.

All connections have been cut off, according to a statement from the provinces.

“This measure has been taken to prevent immoral activities,” the statement said, adding that an alternative will be provided for essential needs.

The fiber optic disconnection leaves offices, homes and other businesses without an internet connection.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad said the ban was absurd.

“If pornography is really the concern, like as in many Islamic countries, it can easily be filtered. Many countries in the Islamic world do exactly that,” he said.

The Taliban formally codified a long set of rules governing morality late last year, ranging from requiring women to cover their faces and men to grow beards to barring car drivers from playing music.

The Taliban’s restrictions on women and freedom of expression have drawn sharp criticism from rights groups and many foreign governments.

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