The Taliban morality police in Afghanistan have detained men and their barbers over hairstyles and others for missing prayers at mosques during the holy month of Ramadan, a U.N. report said Thursday, six months after laws regulating people's conduct came into effect.
The Vice and Virtue Ministry published laws last August covering many aspects everyday life in Afghanistan, including public transport, music, shaving and celebrations. Most notably, the ministry issued a ban on women's voices and bare faces in public.
That same month, a top U.N. official warned the laws provided a ''distressing vision'' for the country's future by adding to existing employment, education, and dress code restrictions on women and girls. Taliban officials have rejected U.N. concerns about the morality laws.
Thursday's report, from the U.N. mission in Afghanistan, said in the first 6 months of the laws' implementation, over half of detentions made under it concerned ''either men not having the compliant beard length or hairstyle, or barbers providing non-compliant beard trimming or haircuts.''
The report said that the morality police regularly detained people arbitrarily "without due process and legal protections.''
During the holy fasting month of Ramadan, men's attendance at mandated congregational prayers was closely monitored, leading at times to arbitrary detention of those who didn't show up, the report added.
The U.N. mission said that both sexes were negatively affected, particularly people with small businesses such as private education centers, barbers and hairdressers, tailors, wedding caterers and restaurants, leading to a reduction or total loss of income and employment opportunities.
The direct and indirect socio-economic effects of the laws' implementation were likely to compound Afghanistan's dire economic situation, it said. A World Bank study has assessed that authorities' ban on women from education and work could cost the country over $1.4 billion per year.