Recent claims from Zabul and Sar-e Pol
AW recently observed similar claims of alleged land destruction in the Arghandab district of Zabul province after two videos of men cutting and destroying trees circulated on X (formerly Twitter) on September 4, 2023. Reports of forced displacement in Sar-e Pol province have also appeared frequently in recent months.
In July 2023, a video – now deleted – surfaced showing families allegedly forcibly displaced by the Taliban in northern Sar-e Pol province. At least six individuals can be seen in the footage, including three minors and two women, all of whom appear to be Hazaras based on their facial features. A man seen in the video claims the family came from Golwarz village in Balkhab district and that he and three other families, together with 20 people, have been living in the house shown in the video under difficult circumstances after losing everything in Balkhab. As of September 6, provincial Taliban officials have not commented on the alleged incidents in Sar-e Pol and Zabul.
‘Non-violent’ methods of forced displacement
AW also recorded several incidents that may indicate an attempt to forcibly displace local residents and minorities in non-violent ways, including through prolonged water shortages, fines, and deliberate destruction of roads. AW has not been able to independently verify these claims, however.
In June 2023, Afghanistan International reported that water shortages had been ongoing in Kabul’s Dasht-e-Barchi area for over five months, which resulted in some residents leaving the area. Some social media users claimed the Taliban authorities did not address the issue but also did not allow residents to dig wells. Dasht-e-Barchi is populated mostly by Hazaras and Shias, and, although the issue of drought in Kabul is not new, some users claimed it was a deliberate attempt to force local residents and minorities to flee.
Between July 20 and August 20, 2023, AW recorded at least 15 claims of unlawful acquisition or deliberate destruction of land and property, including at least five claims explicitly related to forced displacements, with at least 13 people allegedly injured during these incidents. The alleged destruction and unlawful acquisition of property appeared to be used not only to target residents in Panjshir and Hazara communities, but also as a form of targeted revenge, for instance, against former government officials.
In August, a journalist in Bamiyan province claimed that Pashtuns and local Taliban officials reportedly destroyed a road serving at least 500 families*. In the same month, the Independent Persian released an article with footage claiming that in Wardak province, the Taliban authorities imposed fines on Hazara people, forcing them to pay about two million Afghanis to a nomadic man who claimed that the residents of Sarcheshmeh village stole his sheep several years ago.
Although the relationship between ethnic groups and tensions over land have a long and complex history in Afghanistan, in recent months AW has observed an increase in both the number of claims of alleged forced displacement and the number of provinces affected.
*Link removed for privacy reasons.