There are moments in history when civilisation is tested, not by the actions of the oppressor alone, but by the silence of those who watch. Afghanistan in 2026 is one of those moments. The Taliban, having seized power in August 2021, has spent the years since constructing what can only be described as a system of institutionalised gender apartheid, a suffocating architecture of cruelty designed to erase Afghan women from public life, from education, from work, from movement, and now, with chilling finality, from the protection of the law itself. The latest chapter in this dark story is a 90-page criminal code, signed on January 7, 2026, by Taliban Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada and quietly distributed to courts across Afghanistan for immediate implementation. The world should stop and read those pages carefully, because what they contain is not merely a legal document, it is a blueprint for the systematic brutalisation of half a nation’s population, dressed in the language of jurisprudence.
The code’s most grotesque provision concerns domestic violence. Under Article 32, a husband is legally permitted to beat his wife and children, provided the assault does not result in broken bones or open wounds. The bar for criminal accountability is set so deliberately low as to be meaningless. Even if a woman somehow proves that her injuries cross this near-impossible threshold, her husband faces a maximum sentence of fifteen days in prison. Fifteen days. For beating a human being. The contrast with what women face under the same code is staggering, a woman who stays at her parents’ home without her husband’s permission can be imprisoned for three months. The message embedded in these pages is unmistakable: a woman’s body is her husband’s property, and the state will protect the property owner.
The cruelty does not end there. The process by which a woman might even attempt to seek justice under this code is, by design, structurally impossible. To report an assault, a woman must appear in person before a male judge, while fully veiled and accompanied by a male guardian. In the vast majority of domestic violence cases, that guardian is the very husband who carried out the beating. The code also criminalises a woman’s attempt to flee abuse, leaving for a parent’s home without permission is a punishable offence. Escape is illegal. Discussion of the code itself has been made a criminal offence. The Taliban has built a perfect, self-sealing cage. This law does not exist in isolation. It is the culmination of over four years of relentless, systematic dismantling of Afghan women’s rights. Since the Taliban’s return to power, girls have been banned from secondary and higher education, making Afghanistan the only country in the world where girls are forbidden from going to school. Women have been expelled from government, NGOs, and in November 2025, banned from working for United Nations agencies. They are required to wear full-body coverings in public, forbidden from speaking loudly in their own homes lest their voices carry beyond the walls, and ordered to block their windows so they cannot be seen from the street. Afghan women have been ordered not to laugh in the presence of strangers, not to travel without a male guardian, and not to visit public parks, gyms, or salons. More than one hundred Taliban decrees have directly targeted women and girls. One hundred deliberate, calculated acts of erasure.
History will ask how the nations of the world, armed with satellite images, international courts, economic leverage, and the loudest moral megaphones in human history, stood by while an entire gender was legally reduced to the status of property in the heart of Asia.
The UN Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women and Girls has called this what it is, feminicide, the systematic erasure of women from existence. In December 2025, the Permanent People’s Tribunal for Women of Afghanistan, sitting in The Hague, ruled that the Taliban’s actions constitute crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute. Scholars at Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs have concluded that the Taliban’s framework “amounts to gender-based persecution and contributes to conditions that may constitute gender apartheid under international law.” These are not the words of activists. They are the words of international jurists and legal scholars.
And yet, where is the world? This is where my column must ask its most uncomfortable question. The global community’s response to the slow-motion destruction of Afghan women’s lives has been, with honourable exceptions, a masterclass in moral cowardice. The United Nations continues to engage diplomatically with a Taliban regime that has formally legalised slavery and wife-beating in the same document. Most Western governments have offered carefully worded statements of “concern” and then returned to the business of geopolitics. International sanctions remain patchy and inconsistently enforced. The Taliban has not been formally recognized but it has not been meaningfully isolated either. It has been allowed to govern, to consolidate, and to codify oppression into law, while the world watches from a comfortable distance. The betrayal is not merely political. It is civilizational. The international community spent twenty years in Afghanistan, investing billions of dollars and thousands of lives in building schools for girls, courts that protected women, and a constitution that guaranteed equal rights. Afghan women believed those promises. They studied, they worked, they stood for election, they became lawyers and doctors and journalists. When the Taliban returned and those gains were stripped away in days, the world did not just fail to protect them, it abandoned them to the very forces it had promised to defeat. The withdrawal of 2021 was not just a military decision; it was a moral abdication.
There is an argument sometimes made that outsiders should not impose their values on other cultures, that what happens in Afghanistan is an internal matter. This argument must be rejected, firmly and without hesitation. There are no cultural relativist exemptions to the right not to be beaten. No tradition justifies the imprisonment of a woman for visiting her own parents. There is no interpretation of any faith, including Islam, whose scholars and theologians across the world have condemned these laws as a perversion of Islamic jurisprudence, that legitimises the systematic torture of women and the destruction of their humanity. The Taliban’s laws are not a cultural expression. They are a crime. The women of Afghanistan are not statistics or diplomatic abstractions. They are daughters, mothers, sisters, and human beings of immeasurable worth who are living under a regime that has made their pain legal, their silence mandatory, and their suffering invisible. They cannot speak, to do so is a criminal offence. They cannot run,escape is punishable by imprisonment. They cannot even look out of their own windows. The least the rest of the world can do is look back.
History will judge this era harshly. It will ask how the nations of the world, armed with satellite images, international courts, economic leverage, and the loudest moral megaphones in human history, stood by while an entire gender was legally reduced to the status of property in the heart of Asia. The answer, unless something changes, will not be a proud one. The Taliban’s new criminal code is not just a law. It is a declaration of war against women. The only question that remains is whether the world has the courage, finally, to say so, and to act.
The writer is a seasoned professional and a columnist. She can be reached at [email protected].