Music is forbidden in Islam” Taliban leader says music will be banned in Afghanistan and women will need a male chaperone if they travel alone for three days

A Taliban leader has announced that music will be banned in Afghanistan and women will be required to travel with a male chaperone on trips that last several days.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said this in an interview with the NewYork times. He said while women will eventually be allowed to return to work and go on trips to school, and hospitals, they would need a male chaperone for trips that last several days. He also said Music is forbidden in Islam

“Music is forbidden in Islam, but we’re hoping that we can persuade people not to do such things, instead of pressure them. We want to build the future and forget what happened in the past, he said

He suggested to the New York Times that the Taliban will let women return to their jobs in the future as long as they wear a head covering.

He added that concerns that the Taliban would once again force women to stay inside or cover their faces are baseless. He also said that those with proper travel documents will be able to leave the country, and that his regime will not hunt down former interpreters and others who have worked with the American military over the years, but expressed frustration at American evacuation efforts.

He said: “They shouldn’t interfere in our country and take out our human resources: doctors, professors and other people we need here. In America, they might become dishwashers or cooks. It’s inhuman.” But, he said, he is still hopeful that the Taliban could build good relationships with the international community, saying they have already cooperated with international leaders on issues like counterterrorism, opium eradication and the reduction of refugees to the West.

“We are worried our forces, who are new and have not been yet trained very well, may mistreat women. We don’t want our forces, God forbid, to harm or harass women.” In the meantime, he said, women’s salaries will be paid in their homes, echoing what Ahmadullah Waseq, the deputy of the Taliban’s cultural affairs committee, told the Times: that the Taliban has “no problems with working women” as long as they wear hijabs.

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