Taliban: Hindus Must Be Labeled

ByABC News
May 22, 2001, 4:50 AM

K A B U L, Afghanistan, May 22 -- Hindus will be required to wear anidentity label on their clothing in Islamic Afghanistan todistinguish them from Muslims, a Taliban minister said today.

The hardline Taliban rulers, who control 95 percent of this poorCentral Asian state, plan to enforce the edict soon, Mohammed Wali,Taliban's religious police minister, told The Associated Press. Anexact date was not set, he said. The law will also make it mandatory for Hindu women to veilthemselves just like Muslim women of Afghanistan, Wali said. The edict prompted an angry statement from Hindu-dominatedIndia.

'Backward and Unacceptable'

"We absolutely deplore such orders which patently discriminateagainst minorities," Press Trust of India quoted an unnamed Indianforeign ministry official as saying. "It is further evidence ofthe backward and unacceptable ideological underpinning of theTaliban." The decision could further isolate the orthodox militia, alreadyunder fire from the West for its alleged discriminatory policiestoward ethnic and religious minorities, human rights abuses andpoor treatment of women. But Wali said the decision is in line with Islam, "Religiousminorities living in an Islamic state must be identified," hesaid.

Maybe a Yellow OM?

The Taliban have not yet decided what sort of an identity labelHindus will have to wear. There are at least 5,000 Hindus living in Kabul. Thousands ofother Hindus live in other Afghan cities, but there's no reliablefigure on exactly how many. The new law will only be meant for Hindus because there are noChristians or Jews in Afghanistan and Sikhs can be easilyrecognized by their turbans, Wali said. However, at least one Jewis known to live in the Afghan capital of Kabul and there may alsobe some Christians. It was unclear whether foreigners living in Afghanistan would berequired to wear the identity label. Anar, an Afghan Hindu in Kabul who uses just one name, said hedoes not want to wear a label identifying him as Hindu.