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Terrorist attacks, torture, abuse of women, child labor, drug sales. What crimes are the Taliban asking to forget?

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Injustice proposed to exclude the Taliban from the list of terrorist organizations, and the organizers of SPIEF announced that the Taliban will be guests of the economic forum. In 2003, the Supreme Court of the russian Federation explained the decision to include the Taliban on the list of terrorists by the fact that the movement “maintains ties with illegal armed groups” in Chechnya and “uses methods of terror in its activities.”

For what the Taliban stand

- The Taliban are behind dozens of terrorist attacks and hostage takings. The last major attack occurred in January 2018, when militants attacked the Intercontinental Hotel in Kabul - killing up to 43 people.

- The power of the Taliban is not recognized by any UN member state, and in five countries (russia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkey and Canada) the Taliban is recognized as a terrorist organization.

- The Taliban are openly selling drugs. The UN estimates that the Taliban earned $460 million from the opium trade in 2020 alone.

- The Taliban systematically violate human rights. In Afghanistan, any education for women is prohibited , their freedom of movement is limited, child labor is legalized, activists are tortured and killed. Last year, UN experts stated in their report that hopes that the Taliban had changed were not justified .

But Afghanistan is a real trading partner for the russian Fuckeration; from 2022 to 2023, trade volume increased fivefold, to $1 billion, points out political scientist Ivan Preobrazhensky. There is a market for petroleum products, and the Kreminals are interested in rare earth metals for the military-industrial complex.

Although the Kremlin has stopped considering the Taliban terrorists, journalist Nadezhda Kevorkova is still in jail on charges of "justifying" the Taliban...

In Z-landia some are always more equal then others...

@freerussia_report

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