SOCIETY — March 28, 2026

Taliban Arrest Two Social Activists in Herat for Demanding Reopening of Girls' Schools

The Taliban arrested two social activists in Herat for posting on social media in support of reopening girls' schools amid a nearly five-year ban on secondary education for girls.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — corroborated by Afghanistan International2 min read

Taliban Arrest Two Social Activists in Herat for Demanding Reopening of Girls' Schools
Image courtesy Amu TV

The Taliban arrested two social activists in Herat after they called for the reopening of schools and universities to girls on social media. The arrested individuals are university professor Qudus Khatibi and Fayaz Ghori. Both had used Facebook to voice support for girls' education.

In a video posted on Friday, Khatibi criticized the nearly five-year closure of educational facilities to girls and urged the Taliban to fulfill their commitments. Ghori posted on the same platform expressing hope for the day when girls would have access to education.

Following their detention the two activists were transferred from the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice to the custody of the intelligence department. The arrests took place amid the Taliban's ongoing ban on secondary and higher education for girls which has been in effect for nearly five years.

The Taliban have arrested critics and civil activists multiple times for protesting their policies over the nearly five years they have been in power. The latest detentions reflect the continued enforcement of restrictions on female education in areas under their control.

Read the original reporting at Amu TV

Reliability assessment

Two independent Afghan media outlets corroborate the core event of the arrests of the two named activists for their social media advocacy on girls' education. The details of the posts and context match closely across both reports. Minor additional details (such as transfer information or statistics) are present in only one source but do not contradict the other. Per guidelines, 2+ sources confirming the core event qualifies as reliable even with varying peripheral details.

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Afghanistan International: "شکنجه کرده‌اند" ("tortured them") – accuses the Taliban of torture, a strong value judgment implying severe abuse; framing of repeated arrests of "منتقدان" ("critics") for protesting adds advocacy against suppression.; Amu TV: "deprived of education"; "increased forced marriages and intensified violations of women's rights" - these employ emotionally loaded terms implying severe harm and use warnings to frame Taliban policies negatively.

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

Where reports agree

  • Taliban arrested Qudus/Qodos Khatibi and Fayaz Ghori in Herat for social media posts supporting girls' education
  • The content of the Facebook posts by both activists is consistent across reports
  • The Taliban have maintained a ban on girls' secondary and higher education for nearly five years
  • The Taliban have a pattern of arresting critics of their policies

Where reports differ

  • Transfer to Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice then Intelligence Department is only mentioned by Afghanistan International
  • UNICEF statistic of 2.2 million girls out of school and warnings about forced marriages are only reported by Amu TV
  • Slight variation in spelling of first name (Qudus vs Qodos)

Filed by 2 outlets

Filed under

SocietyTaliban, Herat, Girls Education, Qudus Khatibi, Arrests

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