Had enough of hay fever? Here are some simple tips to minimise symptoms and help you enjoy the summer!ĪLISON BOSHOFF: I won't be the wokest link - goodbye! Anne Robinson turned down BBC twice when she was asked to return to host hit quiz showĪJ Bunker kicked in her intimate area by Playboy bunny Carla Howe during vicious brawl at Celeb MMA party Jessica Biel is every bit the doting mom as she carries son Phineas, two, while arriving back at LAX with husband Justin Timberlake who were also not part of And Just Like That Take that SJP! Kim Cattrall reunites with Sex And The City's Patricia Field, Darren Star and Candace Bushnell. The Taliban is now in almost-complete control of Afghanistan following the withdrawal of the last American troops from Kabul, which was completed overnight.Įlizabeth Olsen wears shoulder-baring jumpsuit and joins co-stars at Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness screening in NYC But I need help.’Īnother victim, a former British military translator, was warned he was a ‘spy of the infidel’ and must give himself up or pay with his life.Ī third night letter warned the brother of an interpreter that he had been sentenced to death for sheltering him while a fourth was found in the shoe of an ex-British military translator as he left prayers at a mosque. If I don’t, they will kill me – that is why I am in hiding, trying to find a way to escape. 'If I attend the court, I will be punished with my life. It is a clear message that they want to kill me. Naz said yesterday: ‘The letter was official and stamped by the Taliban. He had applied for sanctuary in Britain under ARAP, the Afghan relocation programme, but had been rejected.
One of those to receive a warning was Naz, a 34-year-old father-of-six whose construction company helped the UK military build roads in Helmand and the runway at Camp Bastion. It is just the latest example of life under Taliban rule, which has also seen women return to wearing modest coverings (pictured) while their rights are eroded Other women are being packed into coffins and shipped abroad so they can be used as sex slaves, she claimed.Īfghans who assisted western forces during the 20-year conflict said today that the Taliban have pinned terrifying 'night letters' to their front doors - warning them to report to court or else face execution. Zabihullah Mujahid, the group's spokesman, insisted today that security forces will be 'gentle and nice' to those under their rule.īut his words contrast sharply with warnings from the UN of widespread human rights abuses and suppression of women's rights.Īnd a little over a week ago, Najla Ayoubi - a former Afghan judge who now lives in the US - said that Taliban fighters had set a woman alight because they didn't like the food they forced her to cook for them. With the American withdrawal from Afghanistan now complete, there are fears the Taliban will quickly reimpose their brutal interpretation of Islam on the country.
'My friends in Afghanistan are scared, they don't know what will happen to them in the future so they're just trying to hide.' The Taliban hasn't changed, because their ideology hasn't changed.' 'They are trying to tell the world "we are changed and we don't have problems with women's rights or human rights",' Akbary said.
He said the attack is just an early example of what life will be like for gay people under Taliban rule, as the final US troops left the country. The man's fate was revealed by Artemis Akbary, an Afghan rights activist now living in Turkey, who told ITV News that he had been in touch with the man. Taliban fighters who tricked a gay man into coming out of hiding then beat and raped him, according to activists (file image)