Taliban insurgents publicly executed an Afghan woman for alleged adultery, a police official said today, in a reminder to the era when the militant group ruled Afghanistan.
The 48-year-old widow was given dozens of lashes before being shot dead yesterday in the remote Qades district, held by the militants in northwestern Badghis province, said Abdul Jabar who serves as a senior officer in the province.
"It happened before the public ... despite that no one has complained, the government will take its own measures about the incident," Mr Jabar said.
The unidentified man who had the alleged affair with the woman had escaped, he said.
When in power from 1996 until 2001, the Taliban staged public stonings or lashings of those found to have sex outside marriage.
A spokesman for the Taliban. who lead the insurgency against the Afghan government and foreign forces, said he was not aware of the incident and could not comment on it.
If confirmed, yesterday's execution would be the second of a woman by the Taliban since their ouster from power nine years ago. A woman was previously executed for alleged spying for foreign forces.
The judiciary in neighbouring Iran last month suspended a sentence of death by stoning for a woman convicted of adultery after an international outcry over the case.