Wednesday, December 10, 2025 - Four
young men were detained by Afghanistan's Taliban authorities and put into a
rehabilitation program for walking around in public dressed up as their
favorite characters from the hit British drama "Peaky
Blinders."
The four friends, who had become popular in their local
Jibrail township, in the southern province of Herat, for strutting through the
streets in trench coats and flat caps, were detained for “promoting foreign
culture”, the Taliban government's Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and
Prevention of Vice said.
The men, all in their early 20s, were detained in Jibrail,
according to Saif-ur-Islam Khyber, a spokesman for the government
ministry.
"They were promoting foreign culture and imitating film
actors in Herat, arrested, and a rehabilitation program started for them,"
Khyber said Sunday in a post on one of his social media accounts.
"Praise be to Allah, we are Muslims and Afghans; we
have our own religion, culture, and values. Through numerous sacrifices, we
have protected this country from the spread of harmful cultures, and now we are
also defending it."
Speaking with CBS News on Tuesday, however, Khyber said the
men were not formally arrested, "only summoned and advised and
released."
"We have our own religious and cultural values, and
especially for clothing we have specific traditional styles," Khyber told
CBS News on Tuesday, Dec. 9.
"The clothing they wore has no Afghan identity at all
and does not match our culture. Secondly, their actions were an imitation of
actors from a British movie. Our society is Muslim; if we are to follow or
imitate someone, we should follow our righteous religious predecessors in good
and lawful matters."
The friends, Asghar Husinai, Jalil Yaqoobi, Ashore Akbari
and Daud Rasa, who appeared recently on a local YouTuber's chat show, were
often seen walking around in outfits modeled on the Netflix hit series' Shelby
family. Video and photos of them walking shoulder to shoulder in their costumes
had circulated widely on social media in Afghanistan in the days before their
arrests.
In the group interview posted online at the end of November
by local YouTube channel Hirat Mic, the young men said they admired the show's
fashion and had received overwhelmingly positive reactions from locals.
"At first we were hesitant, but once we went outside,
people liked our style, stopped us in the streets, and wanted to take photos
with us," Yaqoobi said. "Some comments were negative, but we only
paid attention to the appreciation."
Afghanistan's Taliban authorities, however, deemed the
outfits "contrary to Islamic values and Afghan culture."
A video released by the ministry and shared by Khyber along
with his statement includes audio said to be one of the young men expressing
regret for his decision to wear the Western clothing.
"I'm on Instagram and have five million followers.
Without realizing it, I used to publish and spread things that were against
Sharia," says the voice in the audio recording, which is identified by the
ministry only as one of the young men.
"I was summoned and advised, and from today onward I
will no longer engage in such sinful activities — and I have
stopped."
A close friend of the four young men told CBS News their
detention was "ridiculous."
"The country always feels like a prison," said the
friend, whom CBS News is not identifying for safety reasons. "Our friends
wore these outfits for no political or other reason — just for fun — and the
Taliban's religious police detained them ... They admired the British series
and wanted to share that admiration, but it turned into a nightmare. They are
now behind bars."
The detentions come amid a crackdown by Afghanistan's ruling
Taliban authorities to enforce strict dress codes and other societal rules for
men, women and children.
Women and girls have seen their rights curbed most
dramatically, being barred from virtually all work and formal education after
the age of 11.
The Taliban retook control of the country after two decades
of Western-backed governance in the summer of 2021, as the U.S. military
withdrew under an agreement reached between the Taliban and the U.S. during
President Trump's first term in office.

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