The Taliban Founder: Cutting off the hands of thieves is essential

One of the Taliban's founders and the chief attorneys of the harsh interpretation of Islamic law [seria] when they recently ruled Afghanistan has declared that the movement would still execute executions and cuts, even though perhaps not in public. In an interview with the Associated Press, Mullah Nooruddin Turabi has refused to get [...]
In an Associated Press interview, Mullah Nooruddin Turabi has refused to take into account the anger that has caused public executions by the Taliban in the past, which sometimes occurred in front of large crowds like the stadiums, and urged the world not to interfere with Afghanistan.
Everyone criticized us for our punishments at the stadium, but we never said anything about their laws and penalties,”, Turabi said. Nobody will tell us what laws to make. We follow Islam. ”
Since the Taliban took control of Kable on August 15th and seized full power in the country, Afghans and the world have been waiting to see if the recent savage rule of the 1990s would be recreated.
Turab's comments show that this movement has remained very conservative and radical.
Turabi, now in her 60 ' s, was a minister of justice and head of the so-called minister of virtue proparation, reports Guardian, translates Periscope.
The convicted killers were usually executed with a bullet at the top, made by the victim's family, which had the option of accepting “blood money” in order to allow the guilty to live.
For convicted thieves, punishment was cutting off. For thieves on the high scale, it was amputated except for the hand and the foot.
“Cutting hands is very necessary for security,” said Mr. Turabi. /Periscope











