Taliban have banned Turkish and Indian serials from the first day, and have canceled advertising

There were no women on the streets of Kabul on Monday, the first full day of the Taliban rule in Afghanistan. Armed Taliban patrolled the city, forcing shop owners and government employees to return to work. While it was chaos at Kabul airport, where thousands of people were looking for a plane for it [...]
While it was chaos at Kabul Airport, where thousands of people were looking for a plane to board, in the rest of Kabul, those who had no chance of leaving the city faced two dilemmas where to hide or accept a new way of life under the Taliban.
The changes are now obvious. The Taliban replaced TV programmes, with religious ones, completely removing Turkish and Indian serials, and removing ads, even in the popular commercial programme Tolo, which had recently emerged as a reality show.
Many shops were closed, although the Taliban asked people to return to their jobs, leaving only a few ovens open.
Taliban leaders visited all major points in the city, including a hospital where they demanded that the nurses continue their work. For now, they have left the Minister of Health, one of the few ministers who did not leave with former President Ghan at Sunday.
“gazers in Afghanistan have no support. We're afraid of the Taliban, if they find us, they'll kill us. If they accidentally let us live, they won't let us work. I won't have anything to live for, I live only”, said a journalist on the run.
Women stayed home on Monday for fear of being beaten if they were not covered or out of unaccompanied. In recent weeks, there have been such cases in parts of Afghanistan already occupied by Taliban and forced marriages for Taliban fighters.
Even though the Taliban have not announced a new rule for the people of Kabul, they have used megafos from the mosque, claiming that women should wear burka or hyjab.
Many women in Kabul do not even have burkas, since they have been wearing them for the last time.












