Talk:Taliban/Archive 1

Alleged Inconsistencies in FBI Information Management
Does this section really have anything to do with the Taliban?

"Osama bin Laden for his involvement in the September 11 attacks,"
This line ~ Osama Bin Laden still hasn't been on trial for the September 11th attacks, as such stating his involvement is potential slander. Although generally accepted propaganda, it is not legally the case. Factually it is erroneous to support the premise, and it is unethical to support that veiw.

A clearer line would be "Osama bin Laden for his potential involvement in the September 11 attacks,"
 * Are you high? He's released tapes claiming responsibility. Did you get your legal knowledge from "Law & Order" reruns?

(User not given for this comment.)

Claiming responsibility does not prove responsibility. People can make claims for things that other people actually did. Only a well-organised trial with evidence could prove whether Bin Laden was responsible. abdullahazzam

Actually, a 'clearer line' would read: "Osama bin Laden for his claimed involvement in the September 11 attacks," Also, whoever said this potential slander needs to get their head fixed. Abdullahazzam, was that you? --Skwurlled 17:45, 24 October 2006 (UTC)

No, I have as yet made no edits to the main body of the article, only to See Also and External Links, which I recreated from scratch. The only comment I made was from 'Claiming responsibility' to 'was responsible.' The paragraph before that was written by someone other than me. I have added a note saying that the user name for this comment is unknown, so that it does not run into my own paragraph and cause further confusion. abdullahazzam

You don't have to have a trial to prove everything, if someone claims responsibility; and the vast majority of people give him responsibility, I think it's fair to say he did it. Hitler was never tried for his role in the holocaust, but several wikipedia articles credit him with it. Most facts in the world haven't been proven in a court of law, and they are still facts. 24.79.238.25 08:05, 4 February 2007 (UTC)

Derivation of Taliban from Talib
The term Talib-e-ilm, from arabic/farsi has *nothing whatsoever* to do with the name "Taliban". Taliban is the Pashtu pluralization of Talib, not Talib-e-ilm. the "aan" suffix is a standard pluralization pattern in Pashtu: for example, the plural of Afghan (afghan) is Afghanaan, of taykadaar (contractor) is taykadaaraan, of dost (friend) is dostaan, of us (horse) is usaan etc. etc. Please do not keep reinserting irrelevent statements such as talib-e-ilm etc. Do not insist that this derivation is somehow a corruption/derivation of farsi or arabic. The taliban were a pashtun movement and the name is a pashto-ization of the arabic base "talib". what I am saying can be easily confirmed by any pashtu speaker.

POV Dispute
in section Life Under the Taliban: Drugs: First paragraph:last line

"No other regime in recent times has come as close as the Taliban to rid the country of this vice." - I do not believe the statement "rid this country of this vice" is NPOV as opium is not factually a vice, it is a poppy and a crop that gropws well in afganistan and stops many of its people going hungry and keeps a roof over their heads. I think a more correct statment would be "No other regime in recent times has come as close as the Taliban to rid the country of what some people believe to be a vice" or ommit the statement altogether Speerross 22:44, 28 November 2006 (UTC)


 * This has been edited Protiek 22:45, 28 November 2006 (UTC)

About 1, rise to power
Maybe it can be a good idea to divide this chapter into paragraphes?

Too hot
This topic is simply too hot to be written in any neutral manner.

I think we need some elaboration, external references to substantiate the list of Taliban deeds. -- css

On 1st reading this article reads like an apologia. I agree with including the comments from the Taliban representative, but only if balanced by alternative views. Ask yourself - if you read this, knowing nothing of the Taliban, wouldn't you get a somewhat distorted view?

Going into POV territory myself now, I can't understand why my fellow lefties queue up to defend the Taliban. I dislike them partly because I AM a socialist and fanatical religious nuts are not my cup of tea, whether Islamists or bible-thumpers.

Exile It appears that the entire content is slanted toward what is acceptable in the Western World (i.e. United States, North America, and in some cases Western Europe) and the viewpoints attempted to be presented by others are terms as 'radicals' and their content of questionable neutrality. If I were to use this as resource for a term paper (as opposed to just copying one off the Internet), I would like to be able to present multiple points of view to be all encompassing in presentation. To accomplish that goal, I would probably have to go to another website for further information.

Alliance2020 16:54, 26 January 2007 (UTC)

On second reading this peice seems even more biased. NOt in the facts stated but the non-neutral language eg every accusation against the Taliban is "propaganda". Considering a rewrite keeping the content but altering to a more NPOV tone.

Exile 18:50, 10 Jul 2004 (UTC)

I'm not sure what this article looked like when the above comments were made, but the article now (July 2005) seems to be a NPOV with mildly Taliban sympathetic viewpoints here and there. I wish it were simply a NPOV.

Some links:
 * http://www.rawa.org/
 * http://www.hazara.net/

- I added a few links to external references that give specific mention of the abuses. Don't assume that if there is no reference listed that it is erroneous; I just didn't have time to research those particular ones. -- BryceHarrington

I am willing to dig into the background, try to come up with some external links that can help establish the facts. I need someone to help me out, double or triple check whatever I put out. In the meantime, I would like to move the external links suggested by Mr. Harrington into an External Links section on the main article page, where they will be more clearly and immediately visible to visitors. abdullahazzam

---

Controversy around destroying Buddist statues
It's quite suprising that Western media cared more about these statues than about breaking human rights in Afganistan. Moreover, destroying statues isn't really unusual in history. For example, when communism were overthrown in Eastern Europe, most of Lenin statues were destroyed and nobody really cared.

In earlier times, new dominant religions often destroyed sacral objects of the previous one.

Another important point to note is that representational art is at best irrelevant to Muslims (ever see a Mosque? all patterns and designs... no pictures of people) so big statues that represent a real person (Buddha) would be sort of sacrilegious. Furthermore, it has been reported on NPR in an interview with a leading Taliban official that the story behind the destruction is more complex than has been reported. According to the official, the problem arose when a Western art preservation group came to the country to do work on the statues. The Taliban said, "Great, come on in and fix the statue... but can we ask you one favor? There is this town near the statue where the people are starving and the children are dying. Could you split your budget in half, giving half to the statue and half to the children of the town?"

And the art preservation group said no way. So the Taliban blew up the statues rather than re-hear the request.

Certainly the Taliban official could have been lying or exagerating WRT to this account, but it is an interesting lesson nonetheless.
 * given the way they behave towards other aid workers trying to feed people, I have my doubts. From what I've read the statues are quite isolated.  From the point of view of Muslims and representational art (a) they have never banned other people's represenational art so long as it is not publically displayed.  Thus, if the statues were isolated, they were not offensive.  Islam has long banned any external display of other religion's symbols (even including the ringing of bells by Christians), but never interfered on the inside of churches or synagogues.  When Islamic groups took over a building belonging to a former religion they often painted over earlier art (see Hagia Sophia, for instance) but they did not often go further than that.  They never, for instance, chiselled off the Persian reliefs at the Sassanid tombs.  (b) The Wahabbi style of Islam practiced by the Taliban is not just opposed to images - it is opposed to minarets (the Prophet didnt' have one) and gravestones (they 'lead to idolatry').  They even refuse to practice a normal decorative technique of mosques -- yes, the ones I've seen are covered with inscriptions of Koranic texts, except the ones that are empty. Those are Wahabbi-influenced ones.  They don't like that.  I forget why that would be bad, but they don't do it.  They DO use Koranic inscriptions and secular inscriptions outside mosques (the new airport in Riyadh has an incredible dome with inscriptions). --MichaelTinkler

I do common sense. Religion is for peace and harmony. Destroying a sacred religious/cultural/historical artifact that is being carved into the mountain is quite frankly, barbaric. I do not see how it promotes peace, harmony and makes the world a better place. Don't even try to argue with it. It is just religious zealots strutting their stuff. And why not dispense the budget for blowing up the statue to the poor? --HPY While they might PROMOTE peace and harmony, no religions actually practice peace and harmony and they dont make the world a  better place

I did a little research on the Taliban for a few weeks in August, coincidentally just before they became famous. A lot of the statements made about them on the main page are false. I would definitely take any remarks made by the media SINCE September 11th with a BIG pinch of salt. I would DEFINITELY not trust statements by RAWA, many of whose claims about the Taliban can be seen to be false even from the sources they keep on their own site (RAWA's web site that is). RAWA is the self-proclaimed opposition. They are wrt the Taliban completely biased. One example: the statement that women's schools are closed or don't exist is contradicted by the UN on a regular basis. There are hundreds of schools for girls currently in Afghanistan supprted by UN or NGO agencies (with the knowledge of the Taliban when they were in government) and hundreds more that are not supported by the agencies. You can easily find photographs on UN web sites of schools teaching girls. Many statements circulated about how the Taliban treat women are exagerated nonsense. David Byron


 * Documentation, please. If there is in fact a page on a U.N. site that documents that it belongs in the article. I find it hard to believe your statement, especially after seeing some of the screeds you've written already on Wikipedia, but I'm willing to look at your research. --Dmerrill


 * I will provide documentation if you first apologise for that comment. Otherwise I suggest you use a search engine. David Byron


 * Apologize for what, referring to your work on, for example, Feminism as a "screed"? I wasn't the only person to see it that way, just read the talk:Feminism page. Egern used the word "diatribe". I will not apologize for expressing my opinion. And if you won't produce documentation for your claim without an apology, then I guess the article will stay as it is. --Dmerrill


 * The article would be better labeled US anti-Taliban war time propaganda currently. You (rhetorically?) ask The Taliban are really goodhearted souls who love women, do you know how the Taliban originated? Why does this page contain the RAWA POV and the US POV with no balancing view from the Taliban themselves? The article even assigns intentions and goals to the Taliban based only on what their political enemies have said!! Have you ever read anything by THEM? Why do I even bother.... truthfully I haven't. I didn't even bother to update the main page.


 * Please do put in their point of view. It certainly belongs in the article. --Dmerrill

See talk:vandalism for a comment on the statues and a link to the Taliban ambassador's statement.

Here's a list of what I would call doubtful statements on the front page:
 * movement was characterized by young, educated uneducated surely?
 * withdrew their recognition because of the Taliban's refusal to hand over Saudi terrorist Osama bin Laden I suspect they really withdrew because of US pressure. Taliban's attitude to Osama (which has NOT refused to hand him over incidentally) was unchanged from three or four years back.
 * This has similarities to the Wahhabi branch of Islam practiced in Saudi Arabia although the Taliban have taken it to extremes Really? It's pretty extreme already as I understood it.
 * The Taliban is decried by many in the country and around the world community as oppressive Well so is the US but I doubt that is going to be put on an encyclopedia entry for the US. Better to be specific.
 * While they may have led to reform of government argumentative
 * most appointed local leaders have no education and are barely literate Source?
 * some in the United States have been lenient on the human rights abuses by the Taliban Huh? Lenient? What does that imply?
 * Taliban did initially start out with much popular support Initially?
 * RAWA is a group of women inside Afghanistan who attempt to document and minimize the damage caused to women by the Taliban RAWA has existed for about 25 years now - even before the Soviet invasion. What is RAWA even doing on this page? Maybe on the Afghanistan page?
 * Things that have been banned in parts of Afghanistan I'm glad to see "parts". Need to differentiate between statements by the department of religious enforcement and what actually happens. The two are usually quite different and the former is what gets reported as if it were the latter.


 * ok the whole banned list needs sorting out...... David Byron

I'm going to incur the wrath of Godwin's Law, I'm sure, but I have to make this comment: Oh, well, I guess Hitler had defenders in his day, too. --Jimbo Wales


 * I tried to address the issues you raised, but I'm not qualified to speak to all of them. However, the statement I was criticizing was the one where you said the Taliban are not as oppressive of women as believed, and girls are educated.


 * (Jimbo, don't you know you can't invoke Godwin's law intentionally?) --Dmerrill

Ok I'm out of here. Very disapointing to see the propriatry attitude of so many people on this project. NPOV = supporting Hitler. Prospective new members insulted if they bring new knowledge to the project. LOL. This is a farce. And as I understand it Jimbo is some kind of administrator? Perhaps this is just an American bias with the Taliban thing? I really cannot be bothered to knock my head against a brick wall here. Not a second time. The so-called 'facts' on this article could be proven false by any idiot with 5 minutes to spare and a web search engine. If you really think that it is immoral to have a NPOV on certain issues then it would be more honest to label the pages as such, but I think the real issue here is not morality of the Taliban but the parochialism of the American contributors.

"Whatever" David Byron


 * You have a browser and 5 minutes, and I would very much welcome your proving the facts as presented in the article as false. I promise you that if you can show such evidence, I will fully support its inclusion in the article. So far I've seen only unsubstantiated claims that sound outrageous. Your leaving in a huff rather than providing the evidence says to me that you don't have it.


 * And, what makes you assume we're all American? We aren't, you know. --Dmerrill


 * David, I'm sorry I upset you. I thought my reference to Godwin's Law was sufficient to indicate that I didn't think my response was serious.  According to the most popular use of Godwin's Law, I automatically lose the debate by invoking Hitler.  (And, I even lose out at ending the debate, since I tried to do it immediately.)

Anyhow, I'm sorry about that.

However, let me address some specifics. It is extremely important to have an NPOV article about the Taliban. But I think your claims are unsubstantiated and absurd. Many of us, including me, have spent far more time than 5 minutes with a web browser studying the Taliban, and reading all points of view that we can find. This includes, for me, two books, RAWA's website, the websites of various international aid groups, news reports, etc. And although I'm still very far from an expert, I can say that defending the Taliban requires a serious distortion of the facts. They're very extreme people.


 * Well you could start by reading the ambassador's view and then (because obviously the Taliban lie right?) checking out the facts about education with the UN site, which will confirm it. I know it didn't take *me* very long. It didn't take me long of reading the RAWA site to find that their own site contradicts thoroughly their own claims. Oh but my views are 'absurd'. Guess you'll have to do it for yourselves.

Also, in the context of writing articles and slash-Talking about articles, I have no special powers or privileges. You will not be banned or anything else fr disagreeming with me. The only thing I care about is getting at the truth -- and you ranting about Americans isn't going to help. --Jimbo Wales


 * I would like to make a few comments:

-- Egern
 * Information that challenges the established wisdom of what "everybody knows" to be the case is often a very good, good thing. For example, everyone "knows" that Charles Darrow invented the game of Monopoly.  Well, actually he didn't, in fact he and Parker Brothers kind of took it from the public domain, and I updated the Wikipedia article on that game to reflect the fact that he didn't invent it(although I didn't go into a great deal of detail about it, and I didn't mention just how shady the whole story was).
 * On the other hand, web browsers are great for returning information about the range of opinions that exist on a subject. It is great for knowing that there are people who believe X or Y.  Unfortunately, it also features the opinions of every fringe or revisionist point of view, no matter how outlandish or unsubstantiated.  So it is important to take what we find on the web with a grain of salt.  Just finding "information" on the web doesn't mean it it true.
 * On the other hand, just because the US government says something is true, that doesn't make it so.
 * On the other hand, I consider the Taliban to be pretty evil.

Why not mention that the US is considered oppressive in a lot of places? a lot of people do believe this. On the other hand, the US govt is recognized almost universally, while the taliban govt isn't. thats because a lot of people vehemently disagree with their policies, right?

BTW, I wrote some of the things that were taken issue with, and as a matter of fact I learned them FAR before any of this stuff happened. also, is CNN an authoritative source? If some people think not, then how can we resolve any of this?

--alan d - Alan, the reason why not to mention that is that the article is about the Taliban, not about the U.S. I have now edited the article to say that the Taliban are oppressive; the old wording seemed to suggest that the problem was that many people think they are oppressive, thus leading to these silly (in my opinion) questions comparing the U.S. to the Taliban.

The point is: it does not matter how oppressive the U.S. may be. It may be extremely oppressive in your view. This is still not reason to excuse or ignore the oppression in Afghanistan, and even more no reason for this article to 'soft pedal' the issue. David tried to suggest that people who say these things about the Taliban are just swayed by propaganda in the news, where only 5 minutes of research on the net would tell you that they aren't so bad. Well, that's just false. I don't know what David's 5 minutes of research taught him, but my study of the issue tells me that the Taliban were bad enough. --Jimbo Wales

I assume he meant you could mention it on the US page.

As I said its not all that hard to find UN sites with PICTURES of girls schools in Taliban controlled Afghanistan (though most of their pages are text). I think the Swedish Commitee for Afghanistan would really like to know where all its money went to because they certainly THINK that they are funding over a hundred schools with hundreds of female students, and yes the BBC and others have run plenty of stories on them. As a matter of interest I'd like to know how many UN sites, US government sites, Taliban sympathetic/Arabic sites or reports from independent journalists you all looked at before reaching your conclusions. Oh but sure, we all know that news is never slanted during war time or anything like that right? Maybe the US should bomb Al Jazeera again just to make sure there's no more of that awful media bias. Well I'd love to help you figure it out but I'm off to my Nazi meeting you know.

Let's see...

Unicef says, in 1997, "Since their military victories in the summer of 1995, the Taliban, known for their ultra-conservative interpretation of Islam, have barred girls and women teachers from the classroom and that women may not work." http://www.unicef.org/newsline/afghwarn.htm

The UN says, in 1999, that they are "Deeply concerned about the continuing deterioration of the situation of women and girls in Afghanistan, in particular in all areas under the control of the Taliban movement, as documented by the continued and substantiated reports of grave violations of the human rights of women and girls, including all forms of discrimination against them, such as denial of access to health care, to all levels and types of education, to employment outside the home and, in repeated instances, to humanitarian aid, as well as restrictions upon their freedom of movement..."

The resolution then "Condemns the continuing grave violations of the human rights of women and girls, including all forms of discriminationand violence against them, in all areas of Afghanistan, particularly in areas under the control of the Taliban"

and

"Also condemns the Taliban's denial of women's access to health care and the systematic violation of the human rights of women in Afghanistan, including the denial of access to education and to employment outside their home, freedom of movement, and freedom from intimidation, harassment and violence, which has a serious detrimental impact on the well-being of Afghan women and the children in their care..."

http://www.un.org/documents/ecosoc/res/1999/eres1999-14.htm

I'll be happy to do more of your research for you, but you're going to have to give me something more substantial. You said to look at the UN, and the UN agrees with me completely.

Try again. --Jimbo Wales


 * I tried searching the UN site, too, and found the same report of 1999 that you did, Jimbo. I think we've been trolled. :-/ --Dmerrill

This site is a f**king joke. Can any of you even use a search engine? Heard of Google? Type in "SWEDISH Committee for AFGHANISTAN girls schools" Like I TOLD YOU TO (spoonfeeding). Find over 7000 references. READ SOME. How about the first one even? Morons. Can't be bothered with the UN sites. See comment on "banging head against brick walls" Look you don't even have to know anything about the Taliban do do a web search.

F**k, the UN sites even turns up with just that one search. Here's the FIRST mention on a UN site

UNESCO -- http://www.unesco.org/education/efa/know_sharing/grassroots_stories/afghanistan.shtml

Did I say five minutes? Not EVEN.

Did you say anything remotely intelligent? not EVEN

That picture of the woman teacher seems to be from 1995. also:

The percentage of female teachers, too, has slid from 59.2 per cent in 1990 to 13.5 per cent in 1999. Of these, 96 per cent work in schools run by [international] agencies.

Oh, and, In schools run by the Directorate of Education, only 1 per cent of the pupils are girls. I don't think this could be what Mr. Byron meant. Surely he has better evidence that the Taliban hasn't been that bad for women's education. --MichaelTinkler

O.K., I found a Swedish supported project with a (1) girl's school mentioned: http://www.humanities.mcmaster.ca/~mpeia/projectoverview.htm

Since, however, this training took place in Peshawar, it's not clear where the girls school supported by the Society of Afghan Women (including Mrs. Fatana Gailani, President of the latter) is located.

And here's one with UNICEF undertook an informal survey, which revealed more than 100 home-schools with enrolment of some 2,500 girl students in the eastern region: http://www.pcpafg.org/news/weeklyupdate/1999_Issues/1999_07_13_321.shtml

Still, this is not looking like the Taliban were friends of female education. O.K., I've putg in my 5 minutes and am not very impressed by the record. I was searching google with 'swedish' 'girl' 'afghanistan'. --MichaelTinkler

I do realise that at this stage you lot are truly desparate to defend your little pond here, but surely even Americans know the difference between zero and a positive number? Or is the Florida election representative of US counting skills? I believe you were trying to prove that all education for women was banned were you not? That is the statement made in the article (still). I'm pretty sure it wasn't The Taliban are no friends of female education. Here it is (as it stands currently)

schools for women are all closed Four sources no less. And in this little chat we've added to that -- supposedly -- more from the UN. Kinda of sucks to be proved wrong I guess. Perhaps you should quickly edit the main article to say no friends of female education or do you think that would sound less than professional? How about this for an entry many western sources spread the lie that the Taliban had no education for girls that would seem to be more accurate than most of the statements on that page.

The percentage of female teachers, too, has slid from... I'm sorry I thought we were talking about the pupils not the teachers. Still now you mention it, this it does seem to contradict the "fact" that (occording to the article) there is a ban on women working outside the home (except in health care)

more than 100 home-schools  shall we start a page called More than 100 and say that number is defined as zero when talking about the Taliban education for girls? Would any of you brain-boxes like to now hazzard a guess as to why all these sources have to this day continued to insist there is no education for girls in Afghanistan when there is ample evidence that statement is false?

Well congratulations on disproving two of the statements. I take it as a testiment to the incredible commitment to a NPOV that after finding the evidence for yourselves the main article remains unchanged and you in fact seem to insist that *I* was wrong -- to say it was false that there was no education for girls.

And just for those who missed it let's highlight this little fact shall we,
 * Whereas the country had 3,459 primary schools in 1978, there were only 589 in 1990.

Ok? 1990? Before the Taliban turned up the majority of the schools had already been destroyed by the war. Gee, I wonder if that little old war thing might just possibly have something to do with the high unemployment rate in the country too? (70% unemployment) Huh? Ya think? Nah. They must just hate women. That makes much more sense (besides operating as another excuse for bombing civilians). Everyone knows people in foreign countries are insane anyway, right?

Don't any of you think these statements are just a little on the simplistic side? Is there ANY skepticism here? Even after proving for yourself that at least two of the most well circulated "facts" about the Taliban (no work for women, no school for girls) are false?

Ok, well I don't really care much about the Taliban one way or the other but this has been an eye-opener on the state of this project.

Seige Heil! David Byron

Gotta love the RAWA site....
 * http://www.rawa.org/school95.htm over 95 per cent Afghan children do not go to schoool
 * http://www.rawa.org/facts.htm Primary school enrolment for both girls and boys is low
 * http://www.rawa.org/poppy.htm Afghan women working in poppy fields prefer other jobs

Hang on a sec... this is RAWA - the self-proclaimed totally Taliban-hating opposition group - and even they know that these statements about women not working and girls having no education are false. So why do they keep on repeating these statements? Wow it's almost as if they might be a biased source or something! That's incredible.

Well I'm shocked I tell you. I was always told that everything you read in the newspapers is true and that politicians never lie. David Byron -- are we having fun yet?

Question- In view of the fact that the BBC, PHR, UN, RAWA and the other sources are now known to have lied about the Taliban should they been considered a good source for all the other statements in the Taliban article?

I tweaked the statements on girls in schools to reflect that information. David Byron, do you realize that if you had simply given the additional information it would have been added?


 * Oh I'm sure I would.

Making sweeping claims about "lies" when in fact the article was simply overgeneralizing was very detrimental to your credibility. --Dmerrill


 * Well the information you have is still wrong isn't it? And I did not make sweeping statements about lies.  Do I need to quote what I said or can you make the effort all by yourself this time to pan up a page or two?  What would be a good word to describe your latest attempts?  "screed" maybe?  Let's see...


 * formal schooling for women is not allowed - except that we know it is.
 * punishment for women who attend school source?

However, yes, the statement is a lie. There is all the difference in the world between saying that schools are banned for girls (totally false) and saying there aren't many schools (for either sex) because of 20 years of war.

Do you realise that all of you had this data from the beginning? I directed you to the ambassadors speach which says,

''Similarly we don't have any problem with women's education. We have said that we want education, and we will have education whether or not we are under anybody's pressure, because that is part of our belief. We are ordered to do that. When we say that there should be segregated schools, it does not mean that we don't want our women to be educated. It is true that we are against co-education; but it is not true that we are against women's education.

We do have schools even now, but the problem is the resources. We cannot expand these programs. Before, our government numerous curriculums were going on. There were curriculums that preached for the kings, curriculums that preached for the communists, and curriculums from all the seven parties. So, the students were confused as to what to study. We have started to unify the curriculum and that is going on.

Recently we reopened the faculty of medical science in all major cities of Afghanistan and in Kandahar. There are more girls students studying in the faculty of medical sciences than boys are. But they are segregated. And the Swedish committees have also established schools for girls. I know they are not enough, but that is what we have been able to do.''

Now we have established that the Western sources have lied on this issue of education of women in Afghanistan. Can you demonstrate the Taliban ambassador is lying? What I did upon reading this was check out the facts and that is what led me to the Swedish Committee for Afghanistan and numerous web pages by the UN confirming some of these facts. Seems like I have to post this because folks here don't like reading much.

Here's another quote from a british reporter (before September) http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n06/burk2306.htm

''The repressive edicts that so outrage the West have long been the practice in most of rural Afghanistan, where 80 per cent of the population live. In the rural regions around the western city of Herat a year before the Taliban took control, there were, according to Save the Children UK, nearly 75,000 boys at school and fewer than 2000 girls. In the Afghan countryside women have never gone to school, left the village unaccompanied or chosen their husbands. There is no need to ban television - there aren't any sets.''

So around Herat the proportion of girls in school was - before the Taliban - less than 3 percent. I don't see any of the articles criticising the state of girls education in Afghanistan (among those not simply lying and saying there is none) taking into account this godawful baseline. Its as if the impression they wish to present is that somehow before the Taliban there was a 50% representation of girls and now all girls are banned from schools (0%). Yes, I would characterise this as a lie. Wouldn't you? Especially when you consider who it is that is spreading this story.

Let's look at some other practises listed in the article.


 * public executions  Would you like to guess which state executes more of its citizens, the US or Afghanistan?
 * recently destroying ancient Buddhist statues I think the article I linked to above covers this, but whatever your feelings how is this one event a "practise"?
 * use of torture to obtain confession; no provision for legal counsel if arrested Source? You're not confusing this with the way the CIA operates are you? Or the new powers Bush just gave himself?
 * Hindus and other non-Muslims must wear a yellow identity symbol  Taliban claim that local Hindus supported this measure because the religious police kept punishing Hindu men for not practising the Islamic prayer 5 time a day - which they don't have to do but Muslims do have to do.  Sure that's what THEY claim but I've never seen anyone suggest that isn't true. Have you?
 * women are beaten for going outside without a male relative Again the RAWA site contradicts this statement, http://www.rawa.org/sajida.htm a story of a woman with no mahram going around Kabul for several days with another woman with no mahram meeting and talking to various other women with no mahram and even being stopped by the police for another reason with absolutely no mention of anything about any mahram except that they couldn't go with a strange male by themselves (taxi). In the US that rule's terrible for a woman. In Afghanistan it might save your life.

Have you ever watched any clips from Afghanistan (before the Taliban left power)? You can see the women plainly going about with no mahram. How about this story from the BBC's Afganistan correspondent? http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/middle_east/newsid_1674000/1674146.stm

''When Western politicians decry the Taleban's treatment of Afghan women, it is difficult to recognise the picture they paint. Many stories repeated as fact never happened - at least not as far as I can judge from living in Kabul for two years. ''

Contrast this staement in the wikipedia article,
 * women are not permitted to wear white socks or shoes, nor to wear shoes that make noise when walking

With her comment of life as it happens,
 * Indeed, in Kabul, they walked proudly - wearing high heels, platform shoes, fish-net stockings and tailored trousers, letting their burqas flow behind them to reveal what clothes they wore underneath.

And as for the burqa?
 * However, even in a city like Kabul - with a sophisticated population by Afghan standards - only a tiny number of women are taking off the burqa.

You know all this wouldn't be so f**ked up if at least the article mentioned the things which the Taliban have ACTUALLY done which is bad, namely massacre thousands of people in reprisals for massacres by the Northern Alliance, the US's buddy-buddies. Starvation used as a weapon of war (again like the US) against the Hazaran minority. THAT is what is bad about the Taliban not some stupid dress code or an Islamic set of laws which is pretty similar to Saudia Arabia. But I do think its worth mentioning that the Northern Alliance were the first to start massacring people. I do think its worth mentioning that the numbers klilled before the Taliban were a lot larger; thousands, thns of thousands and millions of refugees. I do think its worth mentioning that they restored peace to most of the country, when no other faction could.

Generally speaking most of the reporting on the Taliban proceeds from an assumption that if anything isn't just like it is in the West it must be the Taliban's fault, when almost certainly the better explanation is thet either their traditional ways are different (difference of culture) or that 23 years of war have made normal functioning civilian life almost impossible.

I ask you - what is a good number for girls school atendance for the poorest country in the world which has just been through 23 years of unbroken civila war and invasion, has land mines all over the place, schools bombed, 70% unemployment, no money coming into the government except heroine sales which they just stopped, the biggest drought in the country for years, and millions dead or fled their homes as refugees, the country run by uneducated religious students with no government experience, trying to rebuild their shattered country, but with only 5 years in power?

What's the average figure for girls school atendence in those conditions, just so we can compare how well the Taliban are/were doing like for like?

I don't believe
"women without complete body coverings (banned by the Quran)"
 * I don't believe this is so... I believe that this is banned by the Sharia or "Quran-derived" law, not by the Quran itself... So, I'm going to remove it for now.  --Alex Kennedy

- What I don't understand is why if you care so much, DB, you don't revise. Now that you have proven (well, irritated me to the point that I went and looked) that 1% of the students in the government schools of the Taliban were female, I suppose I could change it myself. I wonder, however, why you didn't do it earlier rather than merely decrying our American-thinking-inside-the-box and how-horrid-this-site-is? Let me point out, DB, that until you started emoting all over the place I was not paying much attention to the entry. If you care, you revise. I tend to work on things that interest me more. I'll put some revisions into this, now. --MichaelTinkler
 * Clearly any changes I had made would have been wiped out by someone. I was called a Nazi and a troll simply for voicing these comments on the /Talk page.  I'd've been called a vandal (again) if I'd dared to change the main page.  Like I say -- a brick wall.  Your comments perhaps showing the most intransigence.  And 1% isn't correct in any case.  Even that source only said 1% of a certain type of schhool.  It said 13% of another type of school.  Why don't you suggest posting 13% instead of 1%?  Bias?  Also you are not getting the bigger picture here.  No one really knows what the proportion is/was.  And more often than not the information is being reported falsely.  So I would refrain from making any statements about the numbers too explicit if I were you.

No one seems to have changed my insertion of the UNICEF info on girls schools yet. Why don't you try something and see if it gets changed? Please note that my response explains what the 1% represents rather than simply quoting a figure (13, 18.2, or 1%). I thought that if the question is Taliban attitude toward the education of women rather than Swedish attitudes toward the education of women in Afghanistan the Directorate of Education schools figure is more directly useful. Am I being unfair? Obscurantist? --MichaelTinkler
 * Yes you are being unfair. Do you think the SCA is holding these schools in a secret cave somewhere, without the Taliban's knowledge? Naturally the Taliban knew of and supported their actions. Are you going to accuse *Sweden* of gender apartheid because only 13% of the pupils in *their* schools were girls? Or maybe there's more to these figures? How many schools are represented by the 1% figure? How many by the other? David Byron

Having been successfully irritated by Mr. Byron (I suppose that was his goal, to get someone to do the revision for him?) I wonder about 'practices in Afghanistan'. I think we could divide it into 'practices in Afghanistan enforced in other Sharia countries' (dismemberment, public execution, admitted use of torture), since these are true of several other countries, and then the ones like restriction of women's education (which isn't so true of Saudi Arabia, at least - separate but sorta equal seems to be the rule there for education, if not driving). On the other hand, given how shallow this entry is (my Lord, you'd think from his ranting that Wikipedians had written a carefully phrased and well-developed indictment of the Taliban drawn entirely from the web pages of CNN rather than a short article that's fairly dispassionate followed by a list that is supported by links, any one of which could have been amplified with counter examples the way I just did with women's education), I don't know that it's worthwhile. Those things should go on Sharia with a strongly worded link. Speaking of which, I'll do that. --MichaelTinkler
 * Ranting didn't start until I voiced my concerns. See Screed, Hitler supporter and Troll. And what did you call me?
 * nothing at all, so far as I remember, except commenting on the tone of your rant and your failure to edit. --MichaelTinkler

Taliban by Ahmed Rashid has an appendix listing the sharia-style religious police fatwahs, issued from the Kabul department of religion. This represents the "theory" so often not persued in practise, or only persued in practise in Kabul. If you want to make the Taliban look silly I suggest you get Jimbo to copy that list in. David Byron
 * If you have a copy and think it's informative, why don't you? If you think it's uninformative, then feel free not to.  The heart of Wikipedia, despite your unfortunate experience, is actually doing something to the pages, not talking. --MichaelTinkler.


 * My experience of editing a page is that a bunch of people insult you and call it 'vandalism', delete your entries when you make edits and generally act like their turf is being invaded. That's happened on both pages I've made a comment about - and in this case I only edit the /Talk page.  So whoever feels like this is their turf can either make the edit or not.  Argue amongst yourselves.  I think this behaviour is unfortunate, but you did contribute to it (above) with your idiot sarcasm where you equated banning girls education with having over a hundred schools for girls.  No serious and knowledgeable person is going to put up with this bulls**t.  I asked a friend if he'd like to contribute and he was put off by the amateurish look of many of the pages here.  But he didn't know the locals would treat him like crap if he contradicted what they "knew".

Ok, I think that should cool everyone down. In order to return to the goal of the /talk page (to make the article better) I think we should stop the ad hominems (on both sides) and just look at the facts... I note that the "no women's education" clause has been removed and "reduced women's education" has been entered instead. I don't know if all of you agree that that resolves the issue, but it's a step in the correct direction.
 * tosses a few ice blocks around*


 * I moved the last two sections of Taliban to a new subject, Life under Taliban rule. I believe much of the foregoing discussion applies to this new article. --Ed Poor

Removed
I revised the following introductory paragraph, but then removed it:


 * The fall of the Taliban government came in late 2001. The United States had just suffered the September 11 terrorist attack, and had concluded that that operation had been masterminded by individuals residing in Afghanistan. After failing to secure Taliban assistance in brining those individuals to US authorities through diplomatic means (perhaps because of Taliban objection to the validity of the charges against those individuals), the United States, backed by Great Britain and a significant coalition of other world governments, began a military campaign to remove the Taliban from power, and capture those whom the US had labeled "terrorists". Whether or not the intervention had a significant effect on terrorism against the US, it certainly removed the Taliban from power in Afghanistan.

The reason is that these events were already discussed at the end of the article. There's no reason to discuss the same events twice in so short a space. -- Ryguasu

Wow, you all have done amazing work on this article. I came across a news item that might be of use. Maybe some elements of the news item could be incorporated here. I'd give it a shot, but I don't want to intrude on the hard work here, and it looks like there is terrific expertise going on here. Take a lookie here: It was written 3 days after 9/11. Kingturtle 00:11 Apr 30, 2003 (UTC)

Revisiting women
Ok, this dicussion is obviously pretty damn old. But the point is this, and it hasnt really been mentioned all these years that this debate has been here. The only government of Afghanistan to have had any kind of basic respect for women in recent times was the communist government. After that, it's been pretty much down hill. Sure, we dont like the Taliban. They were oppressive by our standards. But their stance to women was *common practice* in Afghanistan. They did not introduce it, they did not make the situation worse. The same generally applies to most aspects of Afghan life. What they did do was bring stability, end the civil war for a few years (and the civil war did re-ignite the moment they lost the government), and make trade and entreprise possible by providing basic safety. They baned opium production, and hugely restricted its levels. Their oppression of women was in no way greater than the oppression in, say, Saudi Arabia, a traditional US ally. And yes, the US is viewed as oppressive by billions of people, and millions of Americans. Yet no one mentions this in the article on the US. I should try and put it into that article just to see the reactions I'd get. Overall, the Taliban were no worse, and probably better, from what preceded them, and no worse from what followed them. And it seems evident they neither banned, nor even hindered, female education. They simply enforced segregation. The fact that about 3% of girls were enrolled in primary education is misleading. What is the figure on boys? Maybe 30%? The point to be made is rather that war and poverty had ravaged the country's education as a whole. The fact that women's education suffered the most is not due to the Taliban. It is due to the fact that your average Afghan family, having 10 kids, could prolly afford to educate only 1 of those 10 kids. And they would typically choose a son. They did that before the Taliban, and by gum, they still do it. They prolly will for decades to come, if not longer. Afghanistan was a bad place to live in, sure. But that was not due to the Taliban. Under the Taliban, it was just as bad a place to live in, but at least it was safer, and had some prospects of improvement. Which I doubt it still does, seeing as the present government's attempts to exert its control over the warlords are more of a joke than anything else. Druworos 02:00, 15 February 2006 (UTC)
 * I actually think that this article is pretty fair to the Taliban. We give both the criticisms and the Taliban response on a number of issues including the treatment of women. I think you're right that we don't talk about how the country became relatively stable under the Taliban after years of war. I believe this is true but I don't have any sources at hand to work from. In any case, this article hasn't had much work for a while and could use more input.--Lee Hunter 02:34, 15 February 2006 (UTC)
 * I certainly agree the article is surprisingly fair. My comment above was more of a somewhat angry reaction to the discussion above. I still feel, however, that while history has always been written by the winners of wars, there is no reason why *we* should also embrace the winners' propaganda. It is simply wrong to have double standards. What if I went to the article on the US, and edited in views by minorities on how oppressed they feel in the States? Or views by Cubans, on how oppressed they feel that they cant get decent healthcare because of the US sanctions? Or the people of any number of countries that have, over the past 50 years, been invaded by the US, or had imposed on them US-backed dictatorships? Or maybe I should edit in the views of Serbians, who just a few years ago had their country bombed with depleted uranium bombs in a unilateral US-lead NATO action? How long *would* such edits survive, I wonder? Yet it seems perfectly agreeable to write about how oppressive the Taliban were, when in fact they did nothing but continue an age-old tradition. (not that I agree with that tradition) Either you treat the US on equal terms with the Taliban, or you dont. And sadly, it seems a lot of people here do subscribe to the 'rogue state'-'axis of evil' type of propaganda the US are using to back their role as the 'world police'. Now if the US feel that they want to police the world, that's just fine. Some power or the other has always been oppressing the rest, ever since the first city-state was founded. But I dont see why we should propagate its propaganda. Druworos 22:08, 15 February 2006 (UTC)

news item
here is an interesting news item someone might want to incorporate here: Kingturtle 19:02, 27 Nov 2003 (UTC)

Oooo, I came across a better one.
 * As Central Asian expert Ahmed Rashid describes in his book Taliban, published last year, the United States and Pakistan decided to install a stable regime in place in Afghanistan around 1994 -- a regime that would end the country's civil war and thus ensure the safety of the Unocal pipeline project. Impressed by the ruthlessness and willingness of the then-emerging Taliban to cut a pipeline deal, the State Department and Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency agreed to funnel arms and funding to the Taliban in their war against the ethnically Tajik Northern Alliance. As recently as 1999, U.S. taxpayers paid the entire annual salary of every single Taliban government official, all in the hopes of returning to the days of dollar-a-gallon gas.

Now that conflicts a little with executive dictat 13129 ... but it's no more bizarre than Powell's M$43 to the Taleban in the spring of 2001 (explained as reward for cutting the opium supply, but I figure was a bribe) even while the US was supposedly feeling out the diplomatic mood for an invasion or suspected of materially supporting attacks on the Taleban. Is the Taleban, like OBL and Saddam and so many others, in some way yet another US creation?

How about adding this poll?
How about adding the results of the 2000 poll by influential American magazine People, that stated that Afghanistan under the Taliban was the Second-worst nation on Earth to live in (it included some documentation of the Taliban's countless human rights abuses, torture, murder, and systematic repression of all women and girls).

Taliban, in the general sense?
I use the term 'taliban' in a general sense, to describe deocentric governments, political parties, and organizations, regardless of particular flavor of religion. Basically, it's a much more concise term than 'religious conservative'. Can we add this generalized use to the article?


 * Only if you can show that it's widely used and understood. Gazpacho


 * As far as I have seen, this usage is getting more and more widespread. Google 'American Taliban' for a few examples. I think it deserves a mention in the article. Mundilfare


 * Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a dictionary. Articles are therefore about topics, not words. This article should just be about the Afghan Taliban movement. Any other meanings should go into the disambig. Ashmoo 03:46, 31 October 2006 (UTC)

POV dispute
I have put a POV tag on the page because of the changes to the section on life under the Taliban made by User:213.54.54.57. The thrust of his changes are to say that the Taliban did not suppress opium production in 2000. I am not an expert, otherwise I would know what the page should say. But there is a strong contrary view, for instance http://opioids.com/afghanistan/ says (in February 2001):

"U.N. drug control officers said the Taliban religious militia has nearly wiped out opium production in Afghanistan -- once the world's largest producer -- since banning poppy cultivation last summer.

A 12-member team from the U.N. Drug Control Program spent two weeks searching most of the nation's largest opium-producing areas and found so few poppies that they do not expect any opium to come out of Afghanistan this year."

Does anyone know what the correct facts are? --Jll 10:10, 9 Nov 2004 (UTC)


 * I don't know what the correct facts are, but one source I read suggested that the truth is a little more nuanced than that: the Taliban did indeed suppress opium poppy cultivation, but did not get rid of existing stockpiles of harvested opium. As this happened at about the same time that world opium prices were very low, and resulted in a rise in opium prices, many people saw the Taliban's actions as being rooted in economics and were not necessarily intended to be permanent.  But that is just what one source says. DanKeshet 01:01, Nov 11, 2004 (UTC)

- A point is that the stockpiles of harvested opium form the 'life savings' of the farmers rather than the government. Removal of stockpiles without replacing it with something of equal value would leave farmers who owe money in serious problems.


 * 'Poppy production increased with the fall of the Taliban government.' Isn't this a statement which would need a source in any other article? It's a lone sentence at the end of a paragraph, in effect stating 'Taliban did a better job than these guys.' without any sources or websites to back it up. Joffeloff 13:54, 4 March 2006 (UTC)
 * DOes canyone else think the picture of the taliban and women is NPOV because I don't.

Sabotage...
209.36.39.2 has made three attempts to sabotage the page, so far. How do we go about warning people about this guy/IP, so something can be done about it? Kaz 18:55, 5 Jan 2005 (UTC)

There seems to be some confusion with regard to 'the Taliban' having worked in Afghanistan for the last three years, with Afghanis, I feel I can comment with some experience... The word 'Taliban' is roughly translated from Pashtun as 'Scholar', albeit in the religous sense. Secondly, Taliban abuses against Women (and 'girls') is real and vastly under-reported, the Burkha was, prior to the Taliban, only worn by whores, they imposed it on all the female population who were capable of menstruation. Even today (2005), many women still wear them for fear of reprisal, beatings and killings are still common even in the suburbs of Kabul for 'lack of respect' by not wearing the Burkha. Many Male Afghani's, while accepting their own freedom, still impose the Taliban edicts upon 'their' women. Thirdly, the Taliban did indeed supress opium production, the common view is that this was done to endear themselves to the west in an apolitical way, reality was that there was no real output from the country, the 'traditional' methods of stripping copper, steel and other metals from existing facilities and selling to India, China and Pakistan were close to exhaustion, the only way they could continue in power was to accept 'humanitarian aid' from the west, in the form of dollars of course, to do this, they needed a bargaining chip - opium. The rest is history.... In case you're wondering, Im an Anglo - Saxon from UK, working for Government money, no particular axe to grind, no allegance, a typical 'industrial mercanary'. The information above was gathered over the last three years from more than three dozen individuals whilst working along side the Afghani's - hope it helps. Cheers!

Glad a common enemy has united the minds at work here...Look deeper into the US funding of the Taliban for the "truth." as a lifelong media watcher I remember our funnelling of aid to the "freedom fighters" in Afganistan during the last days of Soviet rule. Article seems fairly good now, tho.

Why did Omar "flee" in 1994
This line bothers me "Following this incident, Omar fled to the neighboring Balochistan province of Pakistan, from where he emerged in the fall of 1994," My problem is that it's not clear what he was fleeing from. Was he fleeing from the chaos in general or from one or more warlords? Or did he just move there to regroup? I'm just wondering if the word 'fled' without context is someone's spin on the story. --Lee Hunter 14:33, 11 Mar 2005 (UTC)

A. Omar in a shia group? B. Yeah, what about the Taliwans?
I haven't edited this article, but I reacted to two points.

A. First, its claim that Mullah Omar is a veteran of a group (harakatu-l-inqilabi-l-islami) defined in its own article as shia. Since the radical sunni Taliban movement denounced shia muslims as heretics, and butchered not a few of them (a favour kindly returned), maybe there were two groups by the same name? Or maybe it was some kind of religiously mixed islamist group (but that sounds really unlikely)? If not, something is just wrong.

B. Second, the reference to a "taliwan" group spotted by Winston Churchill in the 1800s is just bizarre, since its obviously NOT the same word and the Taliban wouldn't form as a group in the next 100 years. Unless we want to include information on "the moors" under South African history, due to word similarity with "the boers"...?

ARRE

Arabic
"Taliban" is not Arabic. It comes from the Arabic word for students but the word itself is, I believe, as the user Abid akmal edited, Pashto. The Arabic word "taliban" means "two students". There should be some citation for this, but in any case "Arabic" is incorrect. --Yodakii 10:56, 15 November 2005 (UTC)

1st Paragraph - Diplomatic Recognition
"despite having diplomatic recognition from only four countries: the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria"

Chechnya is not a country, I'm going to rewrite this. --Horses In The Sky 22:26, 21 February 2006 (UTC)


 * The article Chechen Republic of Ichkeria says that ChRI "was recognized by the Taliban, but the ChRI never recognised the Taliban in turn." -- so which is it? heqs 19:24, 28 April 2006 (UTC)

Comment
You are comparing Afghanistan under Communism versus Afghanistan today - the Commies had increased the number of schools, health care, eetc, etc. We got a war going to beat the dastardly Commies and guess what - Afghanistan dropped in all categories, gee whiz who would have guessed ( a ten year drought didn't help ). The Taliban was organized by the warloards to stop the endless fighting - that must have really pissed the US off. The Taliban pretty well stopped the heroin trade - now that really pissed the US off ( can you imagine the suburbs without H and coke on Friday night - shudder, shudder...). Just a question - Utah is pretty well run by Mormons - Do Mormons mind? Texas is a little goofy ( to nonTexans that is )- Do Texans mind? —This unsigned comment is by 159.105.80.224 (talk • contribs).


 * "The Taliban was organized by the warloards to stop the endless fighting - that must have really pissed the US off." Where does this information of yours come from, Mr 159.105.80.224? Any new reference? If one reads the books in the articles, the Talibans were partially funded, trained and equipped by the US and the Talibans held the Warlords in check, which helped Afghani to accept the Talibans. DanielDemaret 11:34, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
 * The Taliban were supported by traders and some of the Afghan people because they stopped the random violence. Source Ahmed Rashid's book. Andries 14:53, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Yes. So why does "unsigned" in the comment by 159.105.80.224 write that they were supported by Warlords?DanielDemaret 15:30, 25 March 2006 (UTC) Supported by traders and some afghans, financed by the US, Saudi, China, etc, and trained by ISI. But "organised by the Warlords"? was new to me.DanielDemaret 15:34, 25 March 2006 (UTC)


 * By the way, I am not very interested in the Talibans as such, but I am trying to read all the background material to try and trace their and other groups ideas. If there is an article that does this in wikipedia, please direct me to it.DanielDemaret 11:36, 25 March 2006 (UTC)

Influences on thought, finances, training and arms
I think it would be a good idea if one were to include some more background such as Influences on thought, finances, training and arms.

On thoughts: By reading this article, one gets the ideas of the Taliban seem to have come out of nowhere, or even worse, that the strange militant ideas should be interpreted as mainstream islam interpretation. The first interpretation is so strange, that many might chose the second interpretation. If one reads the books and references, clearly there are influences in steps from many different sources, among them perhaps the Madrasas teaching extreme Saudi teachings.

On finances, training and arms: The external references suggest training by ISI, finances and arms from the US, China, Saudi, and even state of the art AA Missiles from the US. That US had even a small hand in creating the Taliban should be in the article, but put in perspective.DanielDemaret 17:11, 25 March 2006 (UTC)

If one can trace those of their ideas that are strange to westernes, to other groups, scholars and events, then one would perhaps be able to show that these are ideas are, or have been strange even to most muslims. Or conversely, if this can not be shown, then one could perhaps show the reverse. I am not asking for original research here, just some original "putting together different articles" already in wikipedia to see how/if they connect. DanielDemaret 17:17, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
 * You may be intererested in the book by Ahmed Rashid. Rashid wrote that they were basically the products of war (no education was possible, except in Pakistani madrassas). Here are some excerpts that you could use. They were posted by me Andries 17:19, 25 March 2006 (UTC)


 * Thank you Andries. I have read much from that book, but not the entire book yet. From what I can tell, I need more information from other places to get at what I want. Who knows - I may get lazy before I finish the book. :) DanielDemaret 18:11, 25 March 2006 (UTC)


 * THank you again. Among those entries you sent me, Andries were some that suggested one could stop reading there. "Taliban's interpretation of the creed has no parallel in the Muslim world." I am interested in the history of ideas, but this seems to stop further investigation, doesn't it? DanielDemaret 18:21, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
 * I think I do not understand your question. I did not find it difficult to understand the emergence and proliferation of the Taliban after reading Rashid's book. Some boys grew up in the madrassas and all they heard was that the people who took care of them said that Afghanistan was doomed unless a radical form of Islam was enforced. (This is how I think it went often in practice). Andries 18:58, 25 March 2006 (UTC)


 * Then I was unclear. I shall rephrase it later :) DanielDemaret 19:12, 25 March 2006 (UTC)

Chechen Republic of Ichkeria recognition
I'm going to post this on the talk pages for all three articles in question to try and get some consensus.


 * From the Taliban article: despite having diplomatic recognition from only three countries: the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, as well as the unrecognized government of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria.
 * From the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan article: Only Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates ever recognized the Taliban government.
 * From the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria article: There are no countries that officially recognize Chechen independence... it was recognized by the Taliban, but the ChRI never recognised the Taliban in turn

So did they recognise the Taliban or not? --Horses In The Sky 20:14, 1 May 2006 (UTC)

I'm pretty sure the Chechen Seperatist government did NOT recognise the Taliban as quoted in the Ichkerian article. At the time Aslan Maskhadov was in charge, and he was anti-Taliban and fixed on trying to get a workable solution to Chechen Independence as a fully recognised country and not supporting other groups abroad. This has since changed with Aslan's successors who are more "Extreme" in their Islamic faith, and the position now is a mixed view of those who do support the Taliban and those who don't. Although I don't believe its official, after Aslan's death in 2005 it seems like the seperatist movement and the Taliban have some relation, but this is after the Chechen government was put into exile. Mikebloke 12:04, 9 September 2006 (UTC)

memo
3 citations requested, 27 May 06. Tom Harrison Talk 02:23, 28 May 2006 (UTC)

Merge Taliban treatment of children and Taliban treatment of women here
Both forks. Lapaz 02:25, 28 May 2006 (UTC)


 * I agree with this. --Horses In The Sky 17:55, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Merge em. Amibidhrohi 19:41, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
 * oppose merge these topics are all too large Joan-of-arc 03:48, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Merge They are less than a page, check the links. Mrdthree 13:10, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Merge There could easily be two sections here entitled "Taliban treatment of women" and "Taliban treatment of children".-- SomeStrang  e  r ( t ) 18:10, 24 June 2006 (UTC)
 * I went ahead and merged the articles in. There was already a section on women so I just added the picture.-- SomeStrang  e  r ( t ) 18:17, 24 June 2006 (UTC)

References and Citations omitted
The article is very poor in providing footnotes and references. It is hard to separate rumors from fact. It would worth time to research issues and delete stuff that has no refernces. Mrdthree 22:39, 12 June 2006 (UTC)

Removed the following unsourced and doubtful text from the section on the Buddhas of Bamiyan:

One of the Taliban's official said in an interview that destruction was planned by a mob who were extremely angry on the news that Japan did not provide an aid (food and medicines were requested by Talibans)to support the people but offered millions of dollars aid to repare the budhists idols. Taliban official aided that people could not be controled when they found out that food for their dying children is not possible but repair money for some statues is readily available.

Miraculouschaos 14:52, 25 August 2006 (UTC)