SOCIETY — June 11, 2026
Afghan Youth Writes Open Letter to UN Secretary-General Urging Probe into Herat Arrests
An Afghan youth has sent an open letter to the UN Secretary-General calling for an international investigation into the arrests of women and girls in Herat and related protests and human rights issues.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Afghanistan International — 2 min read

An Afghan youth has written an open letter to the United Nations Secretary-General and international human rights bodies. The letter urges the addressees not to forget Afghanistan. It warns against reducing the arrests of women and girls in Herat to mere statistics. The author calls for an independent international investigation into the detentions, the suppression of protests, and human rights violations.
The letter refers to multiple reports published in recent days about the arrest of dozens of women and girls in Herat. It notes that the United Nations and international media have covered these reports. The letter also states that a number of citizens protested the arrests of women and girls in Herat.
This correspondence seeks to highlight the situation in Afghanistan and prompt action from global organizations. The writer emphasizes the importance of addressing these issues through formal investigations rather than allowing them to go unexamined.
Reports mentioned indicate recent arrests in the western Afghan province. Protests have been organized by local citizens in response to the detentions. The letter positions these events as part of broader human rights concerns that require international attention.
The open letter serves as a direct appeal from an Afghan individual to high-level international figures. It focuses on ensuring that the voices of those affected are not lost in the reporting of events.
Read the original reporting at Afghanistan International →
Reliability assessment
Single source consisting of an anonymous personal letter referencing unspecified published reports; no direct evidence, named officials, concrete details, or independent corroboration provided.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Afghanistan International: "Do not forget Afghanistan", "Do not allow the girls of Afghanistan to become statistics in reports", "a dream is buried", "the suppression of protests, and violence against the citizens of Afghanistan" — these phrases use emotional appeals, metaphors of loss and burial, and value-laden terms like 'suppression' and 'violence' to advocate for action.
Independent web corroboration
An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.
Across the newsrooms
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Afghanistan International
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Society — Herat, women's rights, human rights, UN appeal, protests
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