Claims that the Taliban has formally entrenched a class-based justice system in Afghanistan under a newly enacted Criminal Procedure Code signed by its supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, are unverified and misleading. These claims are false, misleading, or unverified.
There is currently no credible reporting from major international news outlets or Afghan authorities confirming such a code or its signing. Cross-checks with independent reporters and official Taliban communications show no corroboration as of this writing.
The spread of the claim is being amplified by some Indian media outlets and various social media accounts that falsely linked the incident to Pakistan. The pattern includes out-of-context headlines, threaded rumors and framing that rely on historical tensions rather than verifiable documents.
Why this happens: misinformation often rides on keywords like Taliban, Afghanistan, Criminal Procedure Code, Akhundzada and relies on the appearance of authority. Without verifiable documents, outlets may rely on unverified screenshots, misread political rhetoric, or empirical translations. Such linkage to Pakistan is not supported by evidence and appears to be a deliberate framing tactic to inflame sensationalist narratives.
How to verify: check for an official publication or credible reporting from multiple independent outlets; review the date, source, and translations; compare with statements from the Taliban's official channels and recognized democratic institutions. Always treat unverified claims as false or unconfirmed until proven.
Impact: misinformation can distort policy discussions and risk misinforming audiences during a volatile regional period. Correcting the record is essential to maintaining informed discourse.
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