Wednesday, December 3, 2025 - Three gunshots pierced the air and a packed cricket stadium erupted in cheers as a 13-year-old boy carried out the execution of a man convicted of killing nearly his entire family, a chilling spectacle that evoked the harshest memories of Taliban rule.
The execution took place in Khost province before an
estimated 80,000 spectators. According to the Taliban-run Supreme Court, the
executed man had been found guilty, along with another accomplice, of
entering a family home and murdering 13 people, including nine children and
their mother.
Under the Taliban’s interpretation of qisas (retributive
justice), the victims' relatives were given the option to forgive the killer.
They refused, instead demanding the death penalty, and the court approved the
execution after all judicial levels—including the Taliban’s supreme
leader—signed off.
The boy fired three shots into the condemned man as sections
of the crowd shouted “Allahu Akbar.” Mujib Rahman Rahmani, a resident who
attended the execution, said such punishments could “prove to be positive”
because “no one will dare to kill anyone in the future.”
Taliban authorities banned camera phones from the stadium,
but images later emerged of crowds lining up to enter the grounds, with
thousands more gathering outside once the venue reached capacity. This marks at
least the 11th public execution since the Taliban seized power again in 2021.
During their previous rule in the late 1990s, the Taliban
regularly staged public executions, amputations, floggings and stonings. Their
return has brought the reimposition of strict Sharia punishments, alongside
sweeping restrictions on women and girls, including bans on secondary and
university education and most employment.
While corporal punishment, mainly public floggings, has
become routine under the regime, today’s execution drew fresh international
condemnation.
United Nations Special Rapporteur for Afghanistan Richard
Bennett wrote on X that reports of the impending execution had circulated hours
earlier, calling for it to be stopped. “Public executions are inhumane, a cruel
and unusual punishment, and contrary to international law,” he said.
Despite such appeals, the execution proceeded, witnessed
by tens of thousands, including families who travelled by car to the stadium,
turning the event into a grim public spectacle.

0 Comments