 |
|
 |
Aghan police beat musicians defying ban Police beat two Afghan musicians and threatened to bomb their office for violating a local ban on music reminiscent of that imposed by the former Taliban regime, a state-controlled newspaper reported today. The Anis Daily quoted the musicians as saying the incident occurred on Monday night at a wedding party in Shakardara district, about 9 miles from Kabul. It said policemen from the district arrived at the party late in the evening and attacked and beat musicians Masroor and Noor Agha.
"They took us to Shakardara's police chief Gulbahar Khan who threatened us, tied our feet, caned us, poured water on us and threw us in the basement," it quoted Masroor, who is in his mid-20s, as saying. Elders of Shakardara stepped in the next morning to secure the musicians' release and to stop police smashing their traditional musical instruments, the paper said.
Another musician told the daily that one of the policemen had threatened to bomb the group's office in Kabul. The paper said the musicians had complained to Interior Minister Taj Mohammad Wardak and asked him take action against the police chief. The police chief could not be reached for comment and interior ministry officials refused to discuss the incident. Khan is a commander of the Northern Alliance that forms the backbone of President Hamid Karzai's government. The alliance has imposed a ban on women singing on state television since coming to power, but other restrictions in force under the Taliban have been relaxed. Many Afghans are music fans and live bands at weddings are an old tradition. The Taliban banned all music during its five-year rule saying it was un-Islamic.
(Reuters) |
|
 |
 |
| Related reading |
| Afghanistan pulls cable channels |
| Cable TV channels showing raunchy Bollywood movies and foreign music videos have - again - been taken off air in Afghanistan by the government |
| 12 November 2004 |
 |
| Musicians claim police harassment |
| Pakistani musicians living near the country's border with Afghanistan have complained they are being harassed by hardliners attempting to stamp out music and movies |
| 08 April 2003 |
 |
| The hills are alive |
| With the rout of the Taliban, Afghanistan is once again resounding to the sound of music. But why does the lifting of the ban have such significance? |
| 15 November 2001 |
 |
| A culture muted |
| By banning music, the Taliban have removed an important force for unity. Article include interview with John Baily, who wrote the Freemuse report on music censorship in Afghanistan |
| 13 October 2001 |
 |
| Just chant |
| Music is high on the list of activities banned by the Taliban. Article on the Freemuse report on censorship of music in Afghanistan |
| 04 May 2001 |
 |
| Aziz Ghaznawi |
| Video interview with an authority on music administration in Afghanistan. He talks about how music was censored within Radio Television Afghanistan |
| 25 February 2008 |
 |
|
|
 |