Under the code, husbands are allowed to physically punish their wives so long as the violence does not result in serious bodily harm.
By World Israel News Staff
The Taliban has enacted a sweeping new criminal code in Afghanistan that formally embeds many of the group’s hardline social policies into state law, including provisions that permit husbands to physically punish their wives under certain circumstances.
The new legal framework, approved by the Taliban’s supreme leader, took effect immediately upon signing and establishes updated procedural regulations governing Afghanistan’s courts.
The code contains more than 100 articles organized across multiple chapters and sections, reshaping the country’s judicial system under Taliban rule.
Among the most controversial provisions are rules addressing domestic discipline.
Under the code, husbands are allowed to physically punish their wives so long as the violence does not result in what authorities classify as serious bodily harm.
Severe injuries such as broken bones, open wounds, or significant visible damage could trigger legal consequences, but lesser forms of physical violence are effectively permitted.
Article 32 specifies that criminal penalties apply only if a husband strikes his wife with an object, such as a stick, and causes severe injury, including wounds or pronounced bodily bruising.
Even then, prosecution depends on the woman proving the harm before a judge. If the court accepts the claim, the husband faces a maximum punishment of fifteen days in prison.
Legal observers say the burden of proof outlined in the law creates significant obstacles for victims seeking justice.
Women bringing complaints must appear in court accompanied by a male guardian, typically the husband himself, a requirement critics argue makes reporting abuse extremely difficult.
The code also outlines how punishments are administered more broadly within Taliban courts. Corporal penalties for serious crimes are reserved for Islamic clerics, while husbands are encouraged to administer what the law describes as “discretionary punishments” for lesser household offenses.
Another section of the code introduces a formal social hierarchy dividing Afghan society into four categories: religious scholars, social elites, the middle class, and the lower class.
Analysts say the framework appears to classify individuals as either “free” persons or “slaves,” placing women in a legally subordinate position comparable to dependents under male authority.
Human rights groups say the measures represent a significant escalation in the Taliban’s effort to codify its interpretation of Islamic governance since returning to power.
10 comments:
The Taliban showed up and implemented extreme modesty and gender separation. Shortly after, the Chareidi community announced new standards of extreme modesty and gender separation. Now the Taliban announce it's okay to beat one's wife. Heaven help our women.
A new law? I thought it was the norm by them to beat there wife’s
Plenty of chasidim already beat their wives - and children.
משנה תורה אישות כ"א:י'
כׇּל אִשָּׁה שֶׁתִּמָּנַע מִלַּעֲשׂוֹת מְלָאכָה מִן הַמְּלָאכוֹת שֶׁהִיא חַיֶּבֶת לַעֲשׂוֹתָן כּוֹפִין אוֹתָהּ וְעוֹשָׂה אֲפִלּוּ בְּשׁוֹט.
Now you are being an idiot.
Woman under strict Torah guidelines have always been treated with the greatest respect.
Hey circle. if the chasidim that have moved into monsey in the last 5 to 10 years are any example, they have no idea what torah guidelines are nor do they care. Most of them are the rudest, non respectful folks I have ever met. Zero menchlichkeit, ZERO! Notice I said most, not All!
This is where our society is heading if we don't stand up and stop the fanatics. Hashem just pressed the emergency button.
This opinion of the Rambam was widely condemned by the rishonim. Your comment though is not about the Rambam - during whose time corporal punishment for men and even children was routine. Rather your comment, which you wrote during a period when domestic violence leads to divorce and imprisonment - reflects on your own character.
Yeah, this is rough
Two rules:
1. The charedim are NOT allowed to beat their wives.
2. Wives who get beaten by their husbands are not allowed to complain about it; as noted by a certain now-departed ZsaZsa Gabor impersonator, the abused wife is supposed to accept it and understand that her husband is doing it because he is sick.
Post a Comment