SECURITY — June 11, 2026

Taliban Morality Police Raid Women's Henna Ceremony in Herat

Taliban morality police raided a women's henna ceremony in Herat and accepted money and a written pledge instead of making arrests. Reports indicate the raid is part of broader detentions, with a related protest resulting in the death of a teenage boy.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Afghanistan International2 min read

Taliban Morality Police Raid Women's Henna Ceremony in Herat
Image courtesy Afghanistan International

Taliban morality police raided a women's henna ceremony in Herat where dozens of women were present. The officers attempted to arrest participants for playing music but accepted money from the families and obtained a written commitment from the organizer to stop the music after facing resistance.

Residents report that Taliban forces have carried out widespread arrests of young women in Herat, creating fear among the population. On Tuesday, residents of the Jibraeel area protested the arrests. Security forces responded by opening fire, killing a teenage boy and injuring several others.

Read the original reporting at Afghanistan International

Reliability assessment

Single source relying entirely on anonymous 'sources' and unnamed 'residents' with no on-record named officials, direct attribution, or independent corroboration of the core events.

The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Afghanistan International: "widespread wave of arrests", "intense fear and terror", "arbitrary arrests", "violent confrontation" — these phrases use emotionally loaded language to portray the actions as oppressive and terrifying without neutral sourcing.

Across the newsrooms

Filed by

Filed under

SecurityTaliban, Herat, morality police, henna ceremony, Jibraeel protest

Spotted an error or have more on this story? Tip the desk on Telegram → or WhatsApp →.

Reader supported

Keep Ehtebar running

Every published story uses paid tools to translate reporting, compare sources, extract claims, and produce a clearer read on Afghanistan. Reader support helps keep that work independent.

€5

helps cover daily verification runs

€15

supports a week of source comparison

€50

keeps independent analysis moving