An Afghan woman protester who went missing after taking part in a rally against the Taliban had been detained by the group for several weeks before be-ing released a relative and an activist said.
Parwana Ibrahimkhel went missing in Kabul on January 19 along with another female protester Ta-mana Zaryabi Paryani just days after they partici-pated in a women’s rally calling for rights to work and education.
The Taliban, the hardline fundamentalists who now rule Afghanistan, had denied the two women pro-testers were detained by them, but on Friday a close relative of Ibrahimkhel told AFP that she had been released after being detained by the group for weeks.
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“We confirm that Parwana has been released today. She had been detained by the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan,” the relative said requesting that his name not be revealed.
Prominent Afghan women’s rights activist Hoda Khamosh confirmed that Ibrahimkhel had been released.
“I contacted close family members of Parwana. She has been released today and is currently doing well,” Khamosh told AFP.
She did not specify whether Ibrahimkhel had been detained by the Taliban.
Ibrahimkhel and Paryani had gone missing along with four of their relatives. The fate of Paryani and the four relatives is still unknown. Since the two women disappeared the Taliban have denied any knowledge of their whereabouts, saying they were investigating the matter.
Weeks after they went missing, two more women activists, Zahra Mohammadi and Mursal Ayar, were reportedly detained by the Taliban, according to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan.
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The Taliban have promised a softer version of the harsh rule that characterised their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001.—AFP