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The Taliban ask television channels to stop broadcasting series with women in them

The Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice has issued "religious directives" to television channels and journalists.

The Taliban Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice has called on Afghan television stations to stop broadcasting series featuring women, as part of new "religious directives" broadcast on Sunday. "Television stations must avoid showing soap operas and soap operas in which women have appeared", says a document issued by the ministry to the media.

It also asks them to ensure that female journalists wear "the Islamic veil" on screen, without specifying whether this means a simple headscarf, already usually worn on Afghan television, or a more covering veil. "These are not rules, but religious directives", ministry spokesman Hakif Mohajir told AFP. Afghan television stations are also being urged to avoid programmes "opposed to Islamic and Afghan values", as well as those that insult religion or "show the prophet and his companions". This is the first time the ministry has attempted to regulate Afghan television since the Taliban seized power in mid-August.

Respect for "Islamic values

During their first reign, from 1996 to 2001, the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, responsible for ensuring that the population respected "Islamic values" on a daily basis, was feared for its fundamentalism and the punishments it entailed. The Taliban had banned television, cinema and all forms of entertainment deemed immoral. People caught watching television were punished and their equipment destroyed; possession of a video recorder was punishable by public flogging. For a time, television sets could even be seen hanging from lampposts.

Overthrown in 2001, the Taliban returned to power last August in a country with a transformed media landscape after 20 years of Western-backed government. Over these two decades, the media sector has exploded, with dozens of private radio stations and television channels springing up. They offered new opportunities to women, who were not allowed to work or study under the Taliban in the 1990s. Today, although the Taliban are showing a more moderate face, they have still not allowed many women to return to work in the public services.

Classes for girls in secondary schools and public universities have not yet reopened in most of the country. At private universities, the Taliban have demanded that female students wear veils. Taliban fighters have also on several occasions beaten up journalists accused of covering "unauthorised" demonstrations by women.

Text Le Matin.ch (AFP)

The Russian team that shot the first film in space return to Earth

The Russian actress and director, who spent 12 days on board the International Space Station (ISS) to shoot the first film in space, landed back on Earth on Sunday morning.

The Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft carrying actress Yulia Peressild, film director Klim Chipenko and cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky arrived in the steppes of Kazakhstan at 04:36, the scheduled time, according to images broadcast live by the Russian space agency.

The head of Russia's space agency, Dmitri Rogozine, published photographs of his team en route to the landing site in ten helicopters before they returned to Earth.

The Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft carrying actress Yulia Peressild, film director Klim Chipenko and cosmonaut Oleg Novitsky arrived in the steppes of Kazakhstan at 04:36, the scheduled time, according to images broadcast live by the Russian space agency.

 

The Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft carrying the crew of the 1st film in space is about to land on the steppes of Kazakhstan. [Sergei Savostyanov / POOL / Sputnik - AFP]

Competition with the United States

Ahead of a rival American project with Tom Cruise, Yulia Peressild, 37, and Klim Chipenko, 38, took off on 5 October from the Russian cosmodrome at Baikonur in Kazakhstan, alongside veteran cosmonaut Anton Chkaplerov.

Their film, provisionally entitled "The Challenge", will feature a surgeon who travels to the ISS on a mission to save the life of a cosmonaut.

Against a backdrop of Russian-American rivalry, this cinematic adventure also takes on the air of a new space race, 60 years after the USSR put the first man, Yuri Gagarin, into orbit.

This initiative comes in the midst of a non-scientific rush into space, with an increasing number of leisure flights in recent months, such as those by British billionaire Richard Branson and American billionaire Jeff Bezos.

Text RTS info ats/iar