Minggu, 05 September 2021

Guinea capital Conakry rocked by reports of coup attempt - BBC News

Members of the Armed Forces of Guinea drive through the central neighbourhood of Kaloum in Conakry on September 5, 2021 after sustainable gunfire was heard.
AFP

The fate of Guinea's President Alpha Condé is unclear after an unverified video showed him in the hands of soldiers, who said they had staged a coup.

However, the defence minister has been quoted as saying the attempted takeover had been thwarted.

This follows hours of heavy gunfire near the presidential palace in the capital, Conakry.

Soldiers are patrolling the otherwise deserted streets of the city centre.

Terrified residents of the central Kaloum district have heeded their orders to stay at home.

In the video, the soldiers from a unit of elite special forces ask President Condé to confirm he is unharmed but he refuses to respond.

They say that all land and air borders have been closed and the government dissolved.

The only bridge connecting the mainland to the Kaloum peninsular, which houses most ministries and the presidential palace, has been sealed off and many soldiers, some heavily armed, have been posted around the palace, a military source told Reuters news agency.

There are unconfirmed reports that three soldiers have been killed.

President Condé was re-elected for a controversial third term in office amid violent protests last year.

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2021-09-05 14:16:56Z
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Berlin stabbing: Two attacked by Afghan national with 'possible Islamist motivation' - Daily Express

The Attorney General office in Berlin tweeted this morning that the 29-year-old had been detained after a gardener and passerby were attacked in the Wilmersdorf part of the German capital. Both victims suffered "serious injuries" during the attack which happened in a park at around 1.30pm local time yesterday, Berlin police said.

In a statement, the force said the suspect approached the 58-year-old woman and reportedly attacked her because he did not believe a woman should be doing such a job.

The man is then said to have stabbed the gardener several times in the neck, leaving her with serious injuries.

A 66-year-old man saw the attack unfold and "rushed" to help the woman, German police said.

The suspect is said to have then attacked the Good Samaritan - also leaving him with serious injuries, a police statement claimed.

READ MORE: France chaos: Macron on the BRINK as police clash with Covid protests

Both victims remain in hospital after being treated for their injuries, police said.

Angela Merkel’s government has faced repeated attacks since welcoming tens of thousands of refugees from countries including Syria in 2015.

According to the UN’s refugee agency, European countries now host more than a million Syrian asylum-seekers and refugees.

Around 70 percent of these are hosted in two countries, with Germany taking 59 percent and Sweden 11 percent.

This huge influx of migrants has sparked a massive backlash - prompting the rise of populist far-right groups including Alternative for Germany.

As well as the sheer number of migrants, others claim that they often come from vastly different cultures which harbour archaic views on topics such as women's rights and LGBT issues.

Despite this fury, outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel has insisted she has no regrets about the decision six years ago.

Her likely successor Armin Laschet, the CDU’s party leader, has taken a different tact.

He recently warned against “repeating the mistakes of 2015” in an apparent bid to appease the outrage.

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2021-09-05 09:57:00Z
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Afghanistan: Panjshir forces claim hundreds of Taliban captured - Al Jazeera English

Taliban and opposition forces continue to battle to control the Panjshir Valley north of Kabul with resistance fighters saying they captured hundreds of Taliban troops.

The National Resistance Front (NRF) of Afghanistan, grouping forces loyal to local leader Ahmad Massoud, said on Sunday it surrounded “thousands of terrorists” in Khawak Pass and the Taliban abandoned vehicles and equipment in the Dashte Rewak area.

NRF spokesman Fahim Dashti added “heavy clashes” were going on.

Al Jazeera’s Charles Stratford, based in the capital Kabul, reported sources on the ground said hundreds of Taliban fighters had been taken prisoner on Sunday.

“Sources within the valley are saying the NRF are claiming to have captured about 1,500 Taliban. Apparently, these fighters were surrounded,” said Stratford.

Dashti wrote on Twitter that Paryan district had been completely emptied of Taliban fighters.

Nearly 1,000 Taliban fighters were either killed, wounded, or taken captive after the exit route behind them was closed off, Dashti said. The information could not be verified independently.

Meanwhile, Taliban spokesman Bilal Karimi said on Twitter on Sunday its forces seized five of the province’s seven districts. Karimi said Khinj and Unabah districts had been taken, he said.

“The Mujahideen [Taliban fighters] are advancing toward the centre [of the province],” he wrote.

Last holdout

Panjshir is the last Afghan province holding out against the armed group that swept to power last month.

Both sides claimed to have the upper hand in Panjshir but neither could produce conclusive evidence to prove it. The Taliban was unable to control the valley when it ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001.

US General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, underscored the tenuous situation.

“My military estimate is, is that the conditions are likely to develop of a civil war. I don’t know if the Taliban is going to be able to consolidate power and establish governance,” Milley said.

If the Taliban cannot quash resistance, it will “in turn lead to a reconstitution of al-Qaeda or a growth of ISIS or other myriad of terrorist groups” over the next three years, said Milley.

Emergency, an Italian medical aid organisation, said Taliban forces had pushed further into the Panjshir Valley on Friday night, reaching the village of Anabah where the group has medical facilities.

Panjshir, famous for its natural defences, was never penetrated by Soviet forces or the Taliban [Ahmad Sahel Arman/AFP]

‘Fog of war’

Bill Roggio, managing editor of the US-based Long War Journal, said on Sunday there was still a “fog of war” with unconfirmed reports. Both sides claim to have inflicted heavy losses on each other.

“The Taliban army has been hardened with 20 years of war and make no mistake, the Taliban trained an army,” Roggio tweeted, adding “the odds were long” for the Panjshir resistance.

“The Taliban army was injected with a massive amount of weapons and munitions after the US withdrawal and collapse of the ANA [Afghan National Army],” he added.

Ali Maisam Nazary – who is not in Panjshir but remains a spokesman for the resistance – said the resistance force “will never fail”.

But former Vice President Amrullah Saleh, who is holed out in Panjshir alongside Massoud – the son of legendary anti-Taliban commander Ahmad Shah Massoud – warned of a grim situation.

In a statement, Saleh spoke of a “large-scale humanitarian crisis” with thousands “displaced by the Taliban onslaught”.

Pro-Taliban social media have boasted of capturing swaths of the valley, but Nick Waters from the investigative website Bellingcat said the posts did not include verifiable photographs to back up the claims.

“It will be quite easy to verify a video showing Taliban within the Panjshir valley,” Waters said.

The Panjshir Valley, surrounded by jagged snow-capped peaks, offers a natural defensive advantage, with fighters melting away in the face of advancing forces, then launching ambushes firing from the high tops down into the valley.

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2021-09-05 11:16:27Z
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New Zealand tried for years to deport Auckland supermarket terrorist Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen - Daily Mail

Officials in New Zealand tried for YEARS to deport supermarket terrorist who stabbed seven before being shot dead after he arrived from Sri Lanka as student in 2011, Jacinda Ardern reveals

  • Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen stabbed seven people in Auckland shop
  • He arrived in New Zealand in 2011 on student visa and granted refugee status
  • In 2016, he came to the attention of the police for showing terrorist sympathies
  • During probe authorities found his refugee status was fraudulently obtained
  • Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said deportation notices  served in April 2019

Authorities in New Zealand had for years been trying to deport the Islamic State-inspired terrorist who carried out a frenzied attack in a supermarket, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern revealed last night.

Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen, 32, was served a deportation notice in April 2019 after his refugee status - which authorities say was fraudulently obtained - was revoked.

While the legal process dragged on, Samsudeen grabbed a knife off a supermarket shelf in Auckland on Friday and injured seven people, leaving three critically wounded.

Samsudeen, who had been flagged to authorities as having shown support for terror group Islamic State, was shot dead by police who were tailing him. 

Ms Ardern, who described the stabbings as a 'terrorist attack', last night admitted authorities had looked at detaining Samsudeen during the deportation process and that it was 'frustrating' he was allowed to stay free. 

She said she expected a toughening of the country's counter-terrorism legislation would be backed by parliament by the end of September. 

The revelations were made after automatic legal restrictions preventing Samsudeen's name being made public were removed on Saturday.

It was revealed that the Islamist arrived in New Zealand from Sri Lanka as a 22-year-old in 2011 on a student visa and was granted refugee status two years later.

New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said measures were already underway to strengthen New Zealand's terrorism suppression laws

Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen, 32, was served a deportation notice in April 2019 after his refugee status - which authorities say was fraudulently obtained - was revoked

Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen, 32, was served a deportation notice in April 2019 after his refugee status - which authorities say was fraudulently obtained - was revoked

While the legal process dragged on, Samsudeen grabbed a knife off a supermarket shelf in Auckland on Friday and injured seven people, leaving three critically wounded. Pictured: Police at the scene in Auckland on Friday

While the legal process dragged on, Samsudeen grabbed a knife off a supermarket shelf in Auckland on Friday and injured seven people, leaving three critically wounded. Pictured: Police at the scene in Auckland on Friday

Islamic State-inspired New Zealand terror attacker was first placed on terror watchlist in 2016

Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen, 32, who was shot dead in a Countdown supermarket on Friday was known to police and politicians for his extremist views, which were largely inspired by terror group, ISIS.

The Sri Lankan arrived in New Zealand in 2011 and was first placed on the terror watchlist in 2016 after authorities were alerted to extremist posts he made on social media. 

Some of the videos he shared online depicted war-related violence, a clear approval of violent extremism and pledging his support for ISIS, New Zealand Herald reported.

He received an official warning from police but continued to post the material, including a comment which read: 'One day I will go back to my country and I will find kiwi scums in my country... and I will show them... what will happen when you mess with S while I'm in their country. If you're tough in your country... we are tougher in our country scums #payback'.

Samsudeen reportedly told a worshiper at a mosque that he hoped to join ISIS in Syria and was detained at Auckland International Airport in 2017 after booking a one-way flight to Singapore.  

He spent a year in custody before pleading guilty to distributing restricted material, earning a supervision order in 2018.

The day after he was released from prison, Samsudeen was arrested by counterterrorism police who followed him as he purchased a hunting knife. 

Internet search history reportedly found he'd researched how to kill 'non-believers'.    

Police hoped to prosecute Samsudeen under the Terrorism Suppression Act 2002, but it was determined that preparing a terrorist attack was not an offence under the legislation, given he had not carried out any attacks.  

He was prosecuted on lesser charges of possessing propaganda in support of ISIS.

During his trial, Samsudeen reportedly told the jury: 'You're worried about one knife, I am telling you I will buy 10 knives. It's about my rights.' 

Samsudeen had reportedly performed internet searches asking about the guidelines of 'lone-wolf mujahideen', knife attacks and prison conditions in New Zealand. Following his release from prison, he was kept under 24/7 surveillance by police, who followed him from his home to the store on Friday.

In 2016, he came to the attention of the police and intelligence agencies after expressing sympathy on Facebook for terrorist attacks.

During their investigations it became evident the refugee status was fraudulently obtained and the process began to cancel his right to stay in New Zealand, Ardern said.

The following year he was arrested at Auckland Airport, when it was suspected he was on his way to Syria.

A police search of his home revealed a large hunting knife and 'material related to ISIS propaganda', court documents said, using another acronym for IS.

Ardern said deportation notices were served in April 2019. But Samsudeen, who described himself as a Tamil Muslim, appealed the deportation.

He told a court he faced 'arrest, detention, mistreatment and torture' if sent back to Sri Lanka.

'He was still in prison at this time, and facing criminal charges. For a number of reasons, the deportation appeal could not proceed until after the conclusion of the criminal trial in May 2021,' Ardern said.

'In the meantime, agencies were concerned about the risk this individual posed to the community,' she added, noting officials knew he could be released and that the appeal, 'which was stopping his deportation, may take some time'.

The country's immigration agency looked into ways of detaining Samsudeen during the appeal process through the Immigration Act, according to Ardern.

'It was incredibly disappointing and frustrating when legal advice came back to say this wasn't an option,' she said.

Samsudeen at that stage had been held in custody for three years and authorities had exhausted all avenues to keep him detained.

Attempts to have him charged under New Zealand's Terrorism Suppression Act were unsuccessful and Ardern said changes to New Zealand's counter-terrorism legislation were expected to be approved by parliament before the end of the month.

'In late August, officials including the commissioner of police raised the possibility of expediting the amendments,' she said.

Police commissioner Andrew Coster said there had been nothing unusual about the man's actions in the lead up to the attack, and he had appeared to be doing normal grocery shopping.

Because he had a 'high level of paranoia' around surveillance, Coster said the police kept their distance, and it took more than two minutes to reach the man and shoot him after he started his stabbing spree.

The day after the attack, Sri Lankan authorities said they would cooperate with New Zealand's investigation 'in any way necessary', according to foreign ministry spokesman Kohularangan Ratnasingam.

Sri Lankan police sources said criminal investigators had already interviewed the attacker's brother, who lives in the capital Colombo.

Ardern said deportation notices were served in April 2019. But Samsudeen (pictured), who described himself as a Tamil Muslim, appealed the deportation

Ardern said deportation notices were served in April 2019. But Samsudeen (pictured), who described himself as a Tamil Muslim, appealed the deportation

Police Commissioner Andrew Coster (pictured right) said there had been nothing unusual about Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen's actions in the lead up to the attack at an Auckland supermarket on Friday, and he had appeared to be doing normal grocery shopping

Police Commissioner Andrew Coster (pictured right) said there had been nothing unusual about Ahamed Aathil Mohamed Samsudeen's actions in the lead up to the attack at an Auckland supermarket on Friday, and he had appeared to be doing normal grocery shopping

'We are collecting information about him as well as anyone else who may have had contacts with him,' a top police official said.

In an interview on Saturday, Samsudeen's mother said her son had been 'brainwashed' by neighbours she said hailed from Syria and Iraq.

'We knew there was a change in him,' she told Hiru TV from her home in Kattankudy, east of Colombo.

Sri Lanka's Muslim Council has condemned the Auckland attack as a 'barbaric act of terrorism'.

'This reminds all of us to come together and be united and fight against terrorism and violent extremism,' council member Mohamed Hisham told the news agency AFP.

Sri Lankan Muslim legislator Mujibur Rahman said his community was saddened by the attack, while lauding Ardern for easing public sentiment.

'Her statement soon after the incident defused the situation and ensured there was no harm to the Sri Lankan community (in New Zealand),' Rahman told AFP.

Ardern insisted no one community should be singled out for the violence.

'It was carried out by an individual, not a faith, not a culture, not an ethnicity,' she said.

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2021-09-05 07:06:04Z
52781857108910

Australia: Some experienced surfers 'no longer want to go in water' after latest fatal shark attack - Sky News

A man has died after being attacked by a shark off Australia's eastern coast.

Surfers, bystanders and paramedics tried to give him CPR, but he had a critical arm injury and could not be revived.

The attack occurred off Shelly and Emerald beaches in Coffs Harbour, New South Wales - about 330 miles (530km) north of Sydney.

The incident happened on Sunday, which marked Father's Day in Australia
Image: The incident happened on Sunday, which marked Father's Day in Australia

Beaches in the area were busy at the time of the incident on Sunday, as families celebrated Father's Day in the country.

Aaron Armstrong, who saw what happened, said it was the first shark attack in the community that he and other locals knew of.

He added: "[We were] just out in the surf and we just saw a few people getting out of the water and we were pretty excited to be honest because we were like 'yes, less people in the water'.

"So we started to paddle down to where these people were and then we got called out of the water.

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"Ran down to see what was happening, saw a man without an arm, lots of blood and lots of people helping him so we just stood by just to see if we needed to help anymore.

"And then we just proceeded to watch people work on him, CPR for a good hour, hour and a half, before the ambulances arrived and then, yeah, it doesn't look good."

This is believed to be the first fatal shark attack in Australia since May
Image: This is believed to be the first fatal shark attack in Australia since May

Although New South Wales is under a coronavirus lockdown, people can leave their homes for exercise.

Before Sunday's incident, the most recent fatal shark attack in Australia was in May.

Glenn Coleman, another witness, said there has been a "lot more shark activity over recent years" - and many experienced surfers now no longer want to go into the water.

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2021-09-05 06:31:15Z
52781861357942

Sabtu, 04 September 2021

Mail's Afghan interpreter describes seeing England after his family's escape from the Taliban - Daily Mail

Mail's Afghan interpreter describes his joy at seeing England for the first time and adjusting to life in a strange land after his family's heart-stopping escape from the Taliban

  • Interpreter Bakhtiar Shoresh escaped from the Taliban with his family last week
  • With hours to spare, they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England
  • They have since been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel for the past ten days 
  • Bakhtiar and his family are now expecting to hear where they will be relocated

Last week, Bakhtiar Shoresh, an interpreter for The Mail on Sunday in Afghanistan, described his family's heart-stopping escape from the Taliban when, with just hours to spare, they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England.

For the past ten days, they have been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel and today, as they prepare to begin a new life, they expect to hear news of where they will be relocated.

Here, in his diary, Bakhtiar describes his joy at seeing England for the first time, adjusting to life in a strange land – where he says even the cows are more relaxed than at home…

Tuesday, Aug 24

We arrive in Manchester early in the morning, exhausted but relieved – safe from the Taliban! 

More checks, paperwork and waiting, and three hours later our family group of nine – my wife and I, our four children and my three sisters – set off by coach on a three-hour journey to our temporary home, a Holiday Inn Express at Heathrow where we will quarantine for the next ten days.

From out of the coach window we get our first look at England. Until today, what little I have seen of this country has been in books and on the BBC television news.

Above all else, my clear impression is of a calm and peaceful land. Everywhere is so green. 'Look at the cattle,' says one of the children. 

Bakhtiar Shoresh (pictured), an interpreter in Afghanistan, described his family's escape from the Taliban when they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England

Bakhtiar Shoresh (pictured), an interpreter in Afghanistan, described his family's escape from the Taliban when they caught one of the last flights out of Kabul to England

Even the animals seem more relaxed. If only my homeland were gentle and free of tension. This, I reflect, is something to be cherished.

Despite the excitement, we all manage a little sleep. For security reasons, we are told that we will not stop en route. What security reasons, I wonder? Nobody can explain. Luckily there is a wash room and toilet on the coach.

Finally, after days of travelling, our journey is at an end. Our hotel is next to the airport. To me, Heathrow looks nothing like an airport. It is surely nothing like the one we left behind in Kabul. 

Where does it begin and end? I ask the driver: 'Are you sure this is an airport? It looks like a city.'

After a wait of 30 minutes in the reception we are shown to our three rooms on the sixth floor – all very comfortable with televisions and bathrooms. My wife and I are with the youngest child, our boy Timor, aged two.

Two of my sisters are with our four-year-old daughter and the other sister is with our eldest child, a boy of 14, and our 11-year-old daughter.

I post on Facebook that I am now in London. The Taliban will see it or hear about it and forget about me. Now we must sleep. Let's see what tomorrow brings.

Wednesday, Aug 25

None of us realised just how strict the Covid rules would be.

This morning, I ventured out into the corridor to check on the rest of the family – only to be met by a security guard sitting outside who leapt up and told me to go back inside my room.

We can't even mix with our own children yet none of us have this illness. For now, we must keep in touch on the room telephones.

I find myself gazing out of the window for long periods. Planes take off and land every two minutes, and every so often I see figures moving in the distance.

After the deafening chaos of Kabul airport, it all seems so incredibly orderly.

Thursday, Aug 26

The food is becoming a problem. I don't want to be ungrateful but it is strange to us. Mashed potatoes? And cauliflower? The vegetables here are boiled – why? Not fried like in my country. And so far there has been no meat.

Breakfast, though, brings Coco Pops, which the children think is wonderful. It would be good if they could have French fries or burgers and pizza, but I am told they are not on the menu.

Mostly it's sandwiches of cold tuna or cheese, left outside the room and accompanied by a sharp knock on the door. Just like prison!

And then, just as we lament the awful food, there is news from home that puts everything into perspective. A suicide bombing has killed many, many people at Kabul airport.

Not for the first time, it occurs to me that we got out just in time.

We are the lucky ones, I tell myself, even though I can't help feeling desperately sad to have left friends and relatives behind.

Saturday, Aug 28

My sister calls from the room next door. My 14-year-old son and 11-year-old daughter are fighting.

Who can blame them? They're jumping on the beds. 'Just don't let them break anything,' I warn my sister. The kids haven't forgiven me for making them leave their iPads and tablets behind in Kabul. 

We were told by the British Embassy to bring just two sets of clothes. Timor has some toy building blocks that someone in Manchester gave us.

I have become addicted to BBC News. With every bulletin comes sad news from home.

To take our minds off it, we are now watching something called Game Of Thrones.

For the past ten days, Bakhtiar (pictured) and his family have been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel and today they expect to hear news of where they will be relocated

For the past ten days, Bakhtiar (pictured) and his family have been quarantining at a Heathrow hotel and today they expect to hear news of where they will be relocated

Sunday, Aug 29

Timor is crying a lot, frustrated at being confined to a small room. I let him run along the corridor outside but the security guards don't like it and tell me to take him back in.

There has been one small victory, though. It turns out I have a cousin who lives just ten minutes away. He is bringing some traditional Afghan dishes – rice and beef with raisins – and, to my surprise, the hotel says this is permissible. My mouth waters at the prospect.

I speak to a good neighbour back in Kabul. We were worried that our house would be taken from us so he has agreed to stay in it, on the ground floor. The other two floors are packed with our belongings.

He says things are getting worse and worse in the city despite the Taliban's assurances when they first arrived.

Girls aged 13 and older can no longer go to school. And young men are now routinely stopped in the street by Taliban officials and told not to shave their beards.

Wednesday, Sept 1

All our Covid tests were negative, and for the past few days we have been going outside two or three times a day for exercise. Seeing the children and my sisters again was fantastic.

We are allowed to walk around a car park. It is good to stretch our legs and be together again. Timor never wants to go back to the room. He just wants to play.

We've still got some of the food my cousin brought us. The hotel won't heat it up for us but it still tastes marvellous.

More news from home: my neighbour has been trying to sell my Toyota 4x4 for me and had a buyer lined up. But the guy couldn't get his money out of the bank because they aren't doing any transactions at the moment. 

He said he could get it in a couple of weeks and asked if he could take the car for now, but I told my neighbour that wouldn't be a good idea.

I hear from others of heavy fighting in the Panjshir Valley, 170 miles north of Kabul, where I am originally from.

This region has not yet fallen and has captured many Taliban fighters. In response, the Taliban is arresting and imprisoning people from Panjshir on the streets of Kabul to use in hostage swaps.

Friday, Sept 3

We've heard nothing from the authorities about what will happen next – where we will live and such like.

Today, we passed another Covid test, which I think is a good sign.

On Sunday, our time in quarantine comes to an end. All of us have had enough and cannot wait to leave the hotel to begin a new life, to make new friends, to work and live in a community again.

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2021-09-05 00:15:46Z
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Afghanistan: Taliban breaks up women's rights protests in Kabul by 'firing shots and using teargas' - Sky News

The Taliban has broken up women's rights protests in Kabul by firing shots into the air and using teargas and tasers, witnesses say.

Women marched through the Afghan capital for a second day in a row on Saturday demanding their freedoms are guaranteed under the new Islamist regime.

The demonstrations began peacefully with a number of women laying a wreath outside the defence ministry in honour of Afghan soldiers who died fighting the Taliban.

But as their shouts became louder, Taliban fighters waded into the crowds to ask what the women wanted.

Members of the Taliban wade into crowds of protesting women in Kabul on Saturday
Image: Members of the Taliban wade into crowds of protesting women in Kabul on Saturday

Social media footage then shows members of the special forces firing guns into the air to disperse crowds.

One witness told Reuters that they also used tear gas and tasers to get the women to flee.

A demonstrator who gave her name as Soraya claimed that the fighters "hit women on the head with a gun magazine" and "the women became bloody".

More on Afghanistan

Taliban special forces bring abrupt end to women's forces
Image: Protesters carry a wreath to lay in memory of Afghan soldiers

One prominent protester, 20-year-old Maryam Naiby, defended her right to protest, saying: "We are here to gain human rights in Afghanistan.

"I love my country. I will always be here."

She has previously run a women's organisation and is a spokesperson for Afghanistan's Paralympic team.

Another, 24-year-old university student Farhat Popalzai, said she wanted to represent women too afraid to come out on the street.

Women gather to demand their rights under the Taliban rule during a protest in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. 
PIC:AP
PIC:AP
PIC:AP
Image: Marches also took place in Kabul on Friday. Pic: AP

"I am the voice of the women who are unable to speak," she said. "They think this is a man's country but it is not - it is a woman's country, too."

The Taliban has repeatedly promised to uphold women's rights since seizing power last month.

But many Afghans and international observers are deeply sceptical, with reports of fighters already breaking their pledge.

Afghan women gather during a protest march for their rights under the Taliban rule in the city of Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. 
PIC:  AP
Image: Women hold signs demanding their freedoms in the Afghan capital on Friday. Pic: AP

In one example, a group of Islamists whitewashed murals on Saturday, including ones that promoted healthcare and praised foreign contributors.

They were replaced with slogans congratulating Afghanistan on the Taliban's victory.

Its cultural commission spokesman, Ahmadullah Muttaqi, tweeted that the murals were painted over "because they are against our values".

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"They were spoiling the minds of the Mujahedeen, and instead we wrote slogans that will be useful to everyone," he wrote.

Meanwhile, the Taliban claims to have taken Afghanistan's last remaining province Panjshir in the north east of the country.

Rebel forces insist they have managed to pushback fighters, but the Islamists say they have taken four of seven provinces already.

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2021-09-04 20:28:29Z
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