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Uncensored Footage of Taliban’s Execution Methods! *WARNING Disturbing Historical Content

One of the Taliban s most powerful tools  was execution.

Not hidden executions,   but public ones meant to warn others.

It was a calculated display of terror,   captured on camera, showing the world the brutal  methods the Taliban used to control a nation,   and the fear they left behind still lingers today.

The Taliban first appeared in 1994 in Kandahar.

They had just captured the city after months of   fighting, and they quickly set up their own  system of Islamic courts.

These courts were   nothing like independent legal systems  with lawyers and fair trials.

Instead,   they were small groups of religious judges and  Taliban commanders who made decisions on the spot,   usually within hours of someone being accused.

There were no formal rules, no appeals,   and almost no chance for the accused to defend  themselves in any meaningful way.

What mattered   was the Taliban s interpretation of Islamic  law, and applying it fast to prove control.

The first executions recorded in Kandahar  happened in early 1995.

According to reports   from human rights groups at the time, two  men convicted of murder were executed by   relatives of the victims.

The four-member  Islamic court in Kandahar that sentenced   them was led by a Taliban judge named Maulawi  Sayed Mohammed.

These executions were public,   often in open spaces where many  locals were forced to watch.

The reasons for these early executions were  similar to the later years of Taliban rule,   but at this point, things were more chaotic.

The  Taliban were still trying to expand their control,   and Kandahar was both a stronghold and a  testing ground for their strict version of   Sharia.

Those accused of murder were executed,  and at least one of the early cases recorded   outside Kandahar involved a former army  officer from the old communist regime,   who was executed in Shaikhabad in Wardak province  after being convicted of killing two men.

That   execution was carried out by a relative of the  victim with a sword, following the court s ruling.

This early pattern shows how the Taliban mixed  traditional tribal customs with their own hardline   interpretation of Islamic law.

In Kandahar,  murder cases often led to execution carried   out by the family of the victim, sometimes called  qisas, or retribution.

This meant that if someone   was found guilty of killing another person, the  victim s family had the legal right under the   Taliban s courts to execute the convicted person.

In practice, there were no safeguards that would   meet international standards for a fair trial,  and these decisions could be quick and arbitrary.

At the same time, there were dozens of punishments  being carried out in Taliban-controlled provinces.

Amnesty International and other watchdog groups  documented that executions were not limited to   Kandahar but were also happening in places like  Lashkargah, the capital of Helmand province.

The brutality of the punishments was meant  to replace fear of criminals with fear of the   Taliban.

Crowds gathered not just because they  were curious, but because the Taliban broadcast   these events as a show of authority.

Bodies  were often left on display for hours after   execution to make sure everyone knew what would  happen to those who crossed the new rulers.

In September 1996, the Taliban marched into  Kabul and changed Afghanistan s future.

After   years of civil war between rival factions,  the Taliban fighters reached the capital with   surprising speed.

They faced little  resistance because many of the city   s defenders had already abandoned their posts  or fled.

This was the moment when the Taliban   stopped being just a militia in the south  and became the rulers of the entire country.

Almost immediately, the Taliban made it clear that  their rule would be strict and final.

One of their   first acts in Kabul was the execution of former  President Mohammad Najibullah and his brother,   General Shahpur Ahmadzai.

Najibullah had been  in hiding since 1992 inside the United Nations   compound in Kabul.

For four years he had  stayed there under UN protection, hoping the   world would keep him safe.

But when the Taliban  arrived in late September 1996, they dragged him   out.

He was shot, and his corpse was hung from a  traffic light post near the presidential palace.

This execution was more than revenge.

The Taliban  had overthrown the previous government and were   announcing that they would impose their  interpretation of Islamic law with zero   tolerance.

They claimed to offer amnesty to  ordinary civilians and low-ranking government   officials if they surrendered peacefully, but for  leaders of the old order, there would be no mercy.

Once Kabul was under their control, the Taliban  took over institutions across the city.

They   transformed public spaces into instruments of  fear.

One of the most striking symbols of this   transformation was Ghazi Stadium.

Before the  Taliban, Ghazi Stadium was known as a place   for sport, where football and other games  brought people together.

After the takeover,   it became one of the main places where  the Taliban carried out executions.

The idea might seem shocking now, but for  the Taliban, it made sense: a stadium held   thousands of people, was easy to secure,  and turned a punishment into a public event.

In the first year of their control, thousands  of Afghans were forced to attend or witness   executions inside stadiums.

Men accused of serious  crimes, such as murder, were brought before   crowds.

The Taliban s religious judges, called  ulama, and commanders declared them guilty and   handed down immediate death sentences.

Sometimes  multiple men were executed in a single event.

Among all the punishments they enforced, one  of the most shocking to Afghans and outsiders   alike was stoning to death for people accused  of adultery or moral crimes, especially women.

The first widely reported case  took place in late August 1996   in Kandahar.

According to accounts  from that time, a married couple,   a 40-year-old woman named Nurbibi and her  38-year-old stepson and alleged lover Turyalai,   were accused of adultery.

The punishment was not  decided in a modern courtroom with evidence and   lawyers.

Instead, Taliban religious judges  and commanders made the decision quickly,   and the condemned were brought before large  crowds in the courtyard near the Id Gah Mosque.

On a hot afternoon, the woman was placed  in a pit dug into the ground, and stones   were thrown.

Those watching included adult men  and even children, because Taliban rules often   meant women were not allowed to speak in public.

After several minutes of stones being thrown,   Turyalai was reported dead, and when it  became clear Nurbibi was still alive,   a Taliban fighter finished the act  by dropping a large rock on her head.

This execution was not just one punishment.

According to people who witnessed it and   journalists who later wrote about it, it  was at least the third stoning for adultery   reported in the Kandahar region since the  Taliban took control there earlier that   year.

The method was cruel and public.

Many  of the men who watched or were interviewed   afterwards defended these punishments, saying  this was what true Islamic law looked like.

Islamic law, in its traditional form, requires  multiple witnesses to prove adultery beyond doubt,   but under the Taliban s strict system,  sentences were handed down quickly,   sometimes based on forced confessions or claims  made by relatives or neighbors seeking revenge.

This blurred the line between  justice and personal vendetta,   and made it much easier for accusations,  even false ones, to lead to death.

Between 1996 and 1999, several reports  from Afghan cities like Kabul, Herat,   Kandahar, and other towns described cases where   people accused of adultery were sentenced  to death by stoning or shooting in public.

Though most documented stoning cases from  this era involve accusations of adultery,   especially against women, stoning was not the  only extreme punishment the Taliban used.

Men   were also executed for moral or criminal  offences, but women were far more likely to   be punished publicly for se*ual crimes, in part  because the Taliban restricted women s movement   and behavior so tightly they could be accused  simply for being with a man outside their family.

The official penal code of Afghanistan  at the time, dating back to 1976,   did not authorize stoning as a  punishment.

But the Taliban s use   of stoning was not something grounded  in the country s formal legal system.

Another one of the methods they  used was amputation as punishment   for theft or robbery.

According to U.S.

government reports from 1998 and 1999,   Taliban courts routinely handed down sentences  where a thief could have a hand or a foot cut   off in a public place.

There was no real  legal defense for the accused, and trials   were extremely short.

In some recorded cases,  after one person avoided punishment by bribery,   a man arrested on a minor charge was chosen  at random to be punished in his place,   showing how arbitrary and dangerous the system  could be.

Many people who survived the amputations   later died from infection or uncontrolled  bleeding because there was little medical care.

Alongside amputations, public executions  continued.

In rural districts,   hangings became more common.

Bodies  were sometimes left hanging overnight.

The cruelty of the Taliban did not stop  with individual criminals.

In August 1998,   the city of Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan  became the site of one of the worst atrocities of   the entire civil war.

Taliban forces  captured the city on August 8, 1998,   after months of conflict with the anti-Taliban  Northern Alliance.

Once the city fell, Taliban   fighters swept through neighborhoods looking for  men from ethnic and religious minority groups,   especially the Hazara, a Shia Muslim community  that the Sunni Taliban deeply distrusted.

In the first hours and days after the takeover,  Taliban forces shot civilians in the streets of   Mazar-i-Sharif without distinguishing  between fighters and ordinary people.

They continued with systematic house-to-house  searches, pulling men and boys out of their   homes and executing them in residential areas  or transporting them to detention centers   where they were later killed.

Reports  suggest that at least 2,000 civilians,   mostly Hazara men and boys, were summarily  executed within days of the city s fall.

The violence did not stop at Mazar s  borders.

Thousands of men from Hazara,   Uzbek, and Tajik communities were detained and  transported to other cities in overcrowded trucks,   many of which became death traps because no food,  water, or ventilation was provided.

In some cases,   dozens or hundreds suffocated or died  of heat stroke inside those vehicles,   their bodies only discovered when the  trucks reached their destinations.

These killings were not the result of  individual soldiers acting on their own.

Taliban commanders openly spoke about punishing  the Hazara for their resistance to Taliban   rule and accused them of killing Taliban  fighters during a failed attempt to take   the city in 1997.

The newly installed  Taliban governor, Mullah Manon Niazi,   used speeches delivered at mosques around Mazar  to blame the entire community for those earlier   deaths and threatened violence if  they did not comply or convert.

Outside of the cities, the cruelty continued in  scattered but deadly events.

In May 2000, Taliban   forces reportedly executed a group of civilian  detainees near Robatak pass in Baghlan province,   most of them identified as Ismaili Hazara  civilians who had been held for months before   being killed by gunfire.

Reports suggest as many  as 31 bodies were found at the execution site,
showing that even months-old detainees could  be summarily executed without explanation.

The temporary downfall of the Taliban  started after the attacks on the United   States on September 11, 2001.

These attacks,  carried out by the al-Qaeda terrorist network,   were traced back to training camps  and safe havens inside Afghanistan,   where al-Qaeda had operated under the protection  of the Taliban government.

The Taliban leadership   refused to hand over al-Qaeda leader  Osama bin Laden to U.

S.

authorities,   even when pressed to do so.

Instead, they  made offers to try him or hand him over for   trial in another country under Islamic judicial  conditions, proposals that were rejected by the   U.

S.

government because they did not meet its  demands for direct custody and accountability.

On October 7, 2001, just weeks after 9/11, a  U.

S.

-led military coalition launched Operation   Enduring Freedom, a campaign to remove the Taliban  from power and dismantle al-Qaeda s infrastructure   in Afghanistan.

U.

S.

aircraft began bombing  Taliban military targets and al-Qaeda camps,   while special forces and allied Afghan  fighters advanced on the ground.

The military campaign moved quickly.

By mid-November 2001, Northern Alliance   forces backed by U.

S.

air power had recaptured  Mazar-i-Sharif and were advancing south.

Kabul,   the capital, fell with only light resistance, as  Taliban fighters withdrew toward their southern   strongholds.

A mix of Northern Alliance  troops and U.

S.

Special Forces entered the   city shortly after, marking the collapse of  Taliban control in the heart of the country.

Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban  movement and their final major stronghold,   fell by early December 2001, signaling the end  of organized Taliban governance in Afghanistan.

Their leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, went into  hiding rather than surrender.

The U.

S.

-backed   Afghan transitional government led by Hamid Karzai  began forming even as combat operations continued.

Almost immediately after the Taliban regime  collapsed, the public executions and the   gruesome punishments that marked its rule largely  disappeared from the streets of Kabul and other   cities they had controlled.

Ghazi Stadium  and other public spaces that once hosted   executions were reopened for cultural events,  and everyday life in Kabul quietly shifted.

Girls went back to school, and families returned  to routines that had been suspended for years.

But the Taliban did not disappear.

They changed how they fought.

Without  open command, they shifted to insurgency,   guerrilla warfare aimed at weakening the  Afghan state and foreign forces supporting it.

Once they went underground, public executions  were no longer possible because they no longer   controlled major cities as they had in the 1990s.

Instead, they began targeting individuals they saw   as enemies.

These were Afghan government workers,  police officers, teachers, local officials,   translators, and anyone who cooperated with  the Afghan government or international forces.

These killings were not part of a legal  system with trials and judges.

They were   assassinations in the middle of the war.

They happened in villages, on roadsides,   and in quiet neighborhoods where the Taliban  could operate.

Afterwards, bodies were often left   in public places or along dirt roads so others  would find them and spread fear.

In many cases,   notes were left on or near the bodies accusing  the victims of spying for the government,   being informants, or betraying the  Taliban.

These notes were meant to   justify the killings and terrorize anyone  thinking about working with the authorities.

After that, beheadings and filmed executions  started to appear as part of the terror   strategy.

One widely reported case was the  beheading of a man named Ghulam Nabi in 2007,   captured on video.

In that footage, a  boy appeared to carry out the killing   while others stood around shouting.

Human  Rights Watch called this a new low in the   conflict because it involved a child and  was filmed in full view of others.

Even   though this footage happened in a part of  Pakistan near the Afghan border, it showed   how violent imagery was used by Taliban-linked  fighters to spread fear and reduce resistance.

Insurgent killings were not limited to  Afghan nationals.

In several parts of   the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, videos  appeared showing captured security personnel   being shot in groups.

One such video, released in  2011, showed at least 16 Pakistani policemen bound   and executed by fighters identified with the  Taliban.

In that recording, once the policemen   were lined up, the fighters opened fire with  rifles and filmed the killings from start to   finish.

This was shared widely online and used  as a message of strength by insurgent factions.

Inside Afghanistan, independent observers and the  United Nations reported that, from 2002 to 2010,   insurgent violence included targeted killings  that were extrajudicial, outside any legal   process.

Many of these assassinations were  directed at Afghan government employees,   members of the national police, soldiers,  and civil servants in areas contested or   controlled by the Taliban.

These killings were  usually unannounced and happened suddenly;   victims were often shot dead  or ambushed on travel routes.

Work that people might think of as neutral,  like education or humanitarian aid, became   dangerous too.

Between 2005 and 2010, the United  Nations reported that there were dozens of violent   incidents against aid workers.

In 2010 alone,  at least 126 major attacks affected aid workers,   and dozens of them were killed or wounded  while working in parts of the country The most infamous of these incidents was in August  2010 in Badakhshan Province, when ten medical aid   workers, six Americans, two Afghans, one Briton,  and one German, were killed while returning from   an eye care mission.

Taliban spokesmen initially  claimed responsibility, saying the team were   spies, though local Taliban commanders later  denied responsibility and called it murder.

The insurgency blurred the line between military  targets and civilians.

People who had nothing to   do with combat were targeted because the Taliban  believed their work under government programs or   international projects made them collaborators  or threats.

International agencies documented the   assassination of at least 21 students, teachers,  and educational staff in the year 2010 alone,   often with no trial or explanation  beyond an insurgent claim of betrayal.

By 2011, the insurgency had been going on for  a decade.

The world had changed.

Mobile phones,   cheap digital cameras, and social  media meant that violence could be   shown instantly to people far away, not just  those within walking distance of a killing.

The Taliban and Taliban-linked groups  began to use this to their advantage.

Instead of just executing someone and leaving the  body, fighters started filming the act itself.

Cameras were pointed at bound captives.

Executioners made sure the victims were   visible.

Videos were edited with graphics, titles,   and messages, and then shared online  or via mobile phones in rural areas.

In these videos, victims were  often shown forced to kneel,   with insurgent fighters imposing a  staged confession or accusation before   the killing.

The cameras never looked away.

The videos also circulated on international   extremist forums to show supporters that  the Taliban was still active and ruthless.

The insurgency came to an end in August 2021  when the Taliban returned to power in Kabul.

As Afghan government forces collapsed and  President Ashraf Ghani fled the country,   the Taliban entered the capital with  little resistance.

They declared a   general amnesty for government workers,  promising peace and restraint, especially   regarding punishments and executions  that had defined their earlier rule.

But by late 2021, reports began to  emerge across Afghanistan that more   than 100 former members of the Afghan  National Security Forces were summarily   executed or disappeared in several provinces,  including Ghazni, Helmand, Kandahar, and Kunduz.

Over the following years, reports confirmed  that executions, corporal punishment,   and public displays of death had  become increasingly common again.

What began as a brief period of quiet  after the Taliban s return to power   ultimately transformed into a  replay of familiar patterns.