Sunday, February 15 2026 - Afghanistan has 'legalised' domestic violence in a troubling crackdown on women's rights.
A new 90-page penal code introduced by the Taliban allows
husbands to physically punish their wives and children - as long as the abuse
does not result in "broken bones or open wounds".
Under the new laws, a husband faces a maximum of just 15
days in prison in cases of "obscene force", such as visible fractures
or injuries. Convictions will be sought only if the wife can successfully prove
the abuse in court.
A married woman can also now be jailed for up to three
months if she visits her relatives without her husband's explicit
permission.
The law uses language effectively treating wives as the
"property" or "slaves" of their husbands, and strips away
vital protections, such as the 2009 law on the Elimination of Violence Against
Women (EVAW), which was introduced during the previous US-backed regime.
Campaigners from exiled Afghan human rights group Rawadari,
who obtained a copy of the Taliban's new penal code, warned in a statement that
it would legitimise the "abuse, maltreatment, and punishment" of
women and children - and expose them to "continued domestic
violence".
Its new limits on women's rights to see their families also
removes one of the few protections available in a country where there are few
"formal and legal remedies", they added.
Rawadari demanded the "immediate halt of the
implementation of the criminal procedure code" by the Taliban courts, and
called for the international community, the United Nations, and "other
relevant international bodies" to "utilise all legal
instruments" to prevent it coming into force.

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