TWISTED Taliban death squads are trawling porn sites to compile a kill list of Afghan prostitutes.

The sickos are putting names to faces of brothel workers who have been filmed having sex during the 20-year allied occupation of Afghanistan.


Security sources told The Sun Online that videos featuring Afghan prostitutes have made their way onto niche porn sites and have been discovered by the jihadis.

Our source said the Taliban are now “hell-bent” on “hunting down” the prostitutes to publicly execute or “humiliate for their own pleasure”.

They added the women face being gang-raped by the terror nuts before being “beheaded, stoned or hung”.

Some of the videos allegedly feature the women having sex with Westerners – further raising the fury of the Taliban.

Women are expected to face the most vicious and brutal repression under the new Taliban regime, with strict new rules and morality codes expected to erase them from public life.

“The Taliban are displaying the height of hypocrisy with this horrific witch-hunt," a source said.

“They pretend to condemn pornography, but are digging deep into the most obscure and deeply-hidden adult sites to find videos that show Afghan brothels so they can identity and slaughter or enslave the women who worked in them.

“Because the videos show obvious location markers of the brothels, these women are now in serious danger of being kidnapped or murdered in the most horrific ways imaginable.”

Taliban forces brutally executed and tortured women when they ruled Afghanistan in the 90s.

And they have continued their vicious tactics in areas under their control over the past two decades, including killing women for having sex outside marriage.

Footage on the sites are lurid videos allegedly showing Afghan prostitutes having sex with their clients at various hidden brothels.

These women are now in serious danger of being kidnapped or murdered in the most horrific ways imaginable.

Sex work in Afghanistan is illegal but as the allied occupation of the country continued, the numbers of men and women selling themselves for sex soared as they attempted to make ends meet.

Human rights organisations across Afghanistan warned in June before the allied withdrawal from Afghanistan there were “hundreds” of sex workers based in the country’s capital Kabul.

They said brothels have been operating out of friends’ houses, coffee shops and beauty salons.

Taliban’s vicious treatment of women

WITH stonings, beheadings and being shot with assault rifles at point blank range, the women of Afghanistan face being left to a horrific fate.

Women were brutally oppressed when then the militant group last controlled Afghanistan in the 90s – and this looks set to return.

Pictures from Kabul already show pictures of women being painted over, and many high profile females have already been withdrawn from public life.

Many women opted to flee the country – and those that remain have spoken of how they have been left in fear for their lives.

During the group's five year rule throughout the 90s women were left housebound, only being able to leave with a male chaperone and while wearing a full burqa.

"The face of a woman is a source of corruption", according to the Taliban.

Women are banned from working, banned from education over the age of 8, restricted from seeing doctors and face the constant threat of flogging or execution for any breaches of "moral" laws.

Already there have been reports of girls as young as 12 being married off to fighters, a woman being shot for wearing "tight clothes", and women being told they cannot leave home without a male chaperone.

Taliban militants in 2016 beheaded a woman for going shopping alone while her husband was away from home in the village of Larri.

Footage from 2012 captured Taliban militants shooting a woman named Najiba, 23, in the back of the head as she sat in a ditch in Qol.

While another horrific video showed another woman named Rokhshana, 19, being stoned in a shallow grave in Ghor in 2015.

Najiba was accused of adultery, while Rokhshana was accused of having sex with her boyfriend outside of marriage.

Video captured earlier this year showed an unnamed woman screaming as she was whipped by a Taliban fighter accused of talking to a man on the phone.

And in one of the most infamous pictures ever captured of Taliban brutality, a woman named Zarmina, a mum-of-five, was executed in the middle of a football stadium in Kabul in 1999.

Zarmina's death was watched by 30,000 spectators as she cowered beneath her veil – showing the terrifying normalisation of violence against women under the Taliban.

And meanwhile, Bibi Aisha had her nose and ears cut off by the Taliban when she tried to flee after being married off at 14.

One sex worker who would only give her first name of Zainab said she turned to prostitution to help feed her five siblings after her younger brother became ill.

The 20-year-old said she saw up to three men every week, receiving 2,000 afghani (£18) from each of her clients.

She added: “I was 13 years old when my father died. My mother had long been sick, and as the oldest, I had to take responsibility for my family. I started working as a housekeeper, but the money was never enough.

“Most of the men are young, between 25 and 30 years old, and most of them are married. They know my employer and call her to arrange an appointment. Some men request to choose from several girls.

“They take 10 minutes, sometimes 20. Some use condoms, but not all of them do. Every time I’m alone in a room with a man, I am scared.”

Heather Barr, co-director for women’s rights at Human Rights Watch, says she first met women in Afghanistan selling sex in 2012 and found that many were forced to do it or found it was their only option to survive.

Taliban squads have been going door to door in Afghanistan kidnapping children as young as 12 to use as child brides and sex slaves since they swept back to power in Afghanistan.

They are also said to be poised to resurrect their horrific interpretation of Sharia law now the allies are on the verge of quitting the country – which involves women being murdered for showing too much flesh, demanding basic human rights, having affairs – and being rape victims.

MEDIEVAL-STYLE LAWS

The brutes have already reportedly burnt to death a woman they said served below-par cooking to its members.

US and other Western forces have now officially withdrawn from the country after a muddled exit which was compared to the end of the Vietnam War.

However, resistance fighters are continuing the gather in the Panjshir Valley as they continue to deny the Taliban's rule.

US President Joe Biden is facing heavy criticism over the pullout which is believed to leave millions of Afghans to their fate at their hands of the ruthless new regime.

When the Taliban last ruled Afghanistan they imposed medieval-style laws with vicious executions, torture and brutal punishments.

The group however appears to be attempting to present a more modern face with a slick PR operation – including an appearance Good Morning Britain – and promises of an "amnesty" for their enemies.


But reports of door-to-door killings are widespread – with any allies of the West particularly at risk.

Foreign secretary Dominic Raab today said that Britain will not be recognising the Taliban as Afghanistan's government "for the foreseeable future".

He said the Western world needed to "adjust to the new reality" that the brutal insurgents have captured the country and are now in charge.

The Cabinet Minister told reporters: "We will not be recognising the Taliban anytime in the foreseeable future.

"But I think there is an important scope for engagement and dialogue."

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