SOCIETY — March 25, 2026
CIVICUS Report Warns Afghanistan's Civil Space on Verge of Complete Collapse
The Global Coalition of Civil Society Organizations (CIVICUS) warned in a new report that Afghanistan's civil space is on the verge of complete collapse due to Taliban suppression of activists, journalists and women. It highlighted systematic human rights violations and called for Taliban accountability and international support.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Hasht-e Subh — 2 min read

KABUL (Afghan Verified) -- The Global Coalition of Civil Society Organizations (CIVICUS) stated in a report published on Wednesday, 5 Hamal, that Afghanistan's human rights situation and civil space remain critical.
The report identifies civil society activists, journalists and women as targets of severe suppression by the Taliban. It accuses the Taliban of continuing widespread human rights violations and crimes against the population, particularly women and girls, without facing accountability.
CIVICUS referred to the ruling of the Afghan Women's People's Court, stating that the Taliban have established a systematic regime of suppression against women and girls. The organization also cited reports from media outlets including Hasht-e Subh and international human rights groups to highlight pervasive violations.
According to the report, the criminal principles of Taliban courts criminalize criticism of the group's policies and leaders, granting judges broad authority to punish opponents. CIVICUS noted that civil society organizations have warned these laws completely undermine civil space, transforming the judicial system into a tool for suppression and enforcing ideological uniformity.
The report points to numerous cases of human rights violations, suppression of civil activities and arrests of activists. Quoting Afghan human rights organizations and activists inside and outside the country, CIVICUS described these measures and new laws not as judicial reforms but as the institutionalization of legal suppression.
The organization called for immediate accountability for the Taliban and urged international support for civil and women's rights.
Read the original reporting at Hasht-e Subh →
Reliability assessment
Single source (Hasht-e Subh) provides direct attribution to a named organization (CIVICUS) and its published report on a specific date (5 Hamal), with concrete details on content; verifiable fact is 'CIVICUS report states X' regardless of topic sensitivity.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Hasht-e Subh: 'severe suppression' (intensifies Taliban actions with emotional loading); 'systematic suppression regime' (frames oppression as deliberate and organized); 'legalization of suppression' (advocacy phrasing portraying laws as tools for control).
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.
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Society — CIVICUS, Taliban, human rights, civil society, Afghanistan
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