
UN Reports Deteriorating Human Rights in Afghanistan Under Taliban Rule
UNITED NATIONS (Afghan Verified) -- UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk presented a report detailing a severe deterioration in the human rights situation in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.
The report states that 21.9 million Afghans, nearly half the population, will require humanitarian assistance this year amid an economic crisis worsened by reduced international aid, the return of nearly three million Afghan migrants from neighboring countries in 2025 and ongoing drought.
Taliban policies and decrees since taking power in 2021 have severely restricted the rights and freedoms of women and girls, including bans on education beyond the sixth grade and at universities, limitations on employment, access to public services and freedom of movement.
The UN document highlights increased curbs on freedom of expression, including arbitrary detentions of journalists and the removal of works by female authors from libraries. It also documents continued public executions and floggings by the Taliban.
Millions of Afghans live in extreme poverty, deprived of basic rights to food, water, education and health care, according to Türk. Afghanistan International reported a 48-hour nationwide internet blackout in 2025 that disrupted services, while Amu TV noted at least 12 public executions since 2021, including two recently, and 70 civilians killed with 478 injured in border clashes with Pakistan over the last three months of 2025.
Türk urged the Taliban to repeal discriminatory measures and called on the international community to provide support and halt forced deportations of Afghan migrants.
Know more about this story?
If you have additional information or believe something is inaccurate, let us know. Your tips help us stay accurate.
Where reports agree
- UN report by Volker Türk on human rights deterioration under Taliban
- 21.9 million Afghans need humanitarian aid
- Aid reduction, 3 million migrant returns, drought worsening crisis
- Taliban policies harming women: bans on secondary/higher education, work, movement
- Restrictions on expression, journalists detained, female authors' books removed
- Executions and public flogging continue
- Extreme poverty depriving basics
Where reports differ
- Specifics like medical exams without women, salary cuts for female employees, clothing restrictions, UN office access limits (Amu TV only)
- Two earthquakes in 2025 (Amu TV only)
- Civilian casualties from Pakistan border clashes (Amu TV only)
- Internet blackout (Afghanistan International only)
More in Politics

Pakistani Professor Says Islamabad's Afghanistan Policy Has Backfired, Now Views Taliban as Terrorist Regime

Radio Mashaal Ceases Operations After 16 Years Due to Financial Difficulties

US House Foreign Affairs Committee Approves Bill on Afghan Women with Bipartisan Support

UN Experts Condemn Taliban's Ban on Women Entering UN Offices, Urge Diplomatic Pressure
ReliablePakistani Professor Says Islamabad's Afghanistan Policy Has Backfired, Now Views Taliban as Terrorist Regime
Pakistani political science professor Aqil Shah told The New Yorker that Pakistan's 'strategic depth' policy in Afghanistan has backfired, with the Afghan Taliban sheltering the TTP for attacks on Pakistan, prompting Islamabad to now label the Taliban a terrorist regime and consider regime change.
ReliableRadio Mashaal Ceases Operations After 16 Years Due to Financial Difficulties
Radio Mashaal, the US-funded Pashto service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, has ceased all operations after 16 years due to financial difficulties, effective March 31. The closure occurs amid a reported 20% rise in media violations in Afghanistan during solar year 1404.
ReliableUS House Foreign Affairs Committee Approves Bill on Afghan Women with Bipartisan Support
The US House Foreign Affairs Committee approved a bill countering restrictions on Afghan women and girls with bipartisan support, as confirmed by Representative Sydney Kamlager-Dove. The legislation advances to the full House and would mandate State Department reports on Taliban policies.
ReliableUN Experts Condemn Taliban's Ban on Women Entering UN Offices, Urge Diplomatic Pressure
UN experts condemned the Taliban's ban on Afghan women entering UN offices since September 2025 as a direct attack on women's rights and urged a unified UN response and diplomatic pressure from member states to end it immediately. The restrictions, enforced by Taliban forces, threaten humanitarian operations and worsen conditions for women.