ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Afghanistan's ruling Taliban movement has banned the use of the Internet in the war-torn country to stop access to vulgar, immoral and anti-Islamic material, an Afghan news
service said on Friday.
The Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press (AIP) quoted Taliban Foreign Minister Maulvi Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil as saying the movement was not against the Internet as such but
was opposed to obscenity, vulgarity and anti-Islamic "stuff" on it.
"We want to establish a system in Afghanistan through which we can control all those things that are wrong, obscene, immoral and
against Islam," he said.
The ban also applies to government departments, AIP said.
It was not immediately known how many people or offices use the Internet in a country in which infrastructure
is in ruins because of more than two decades of war. There are not many computers and most of areas do not have electricity.
Those who can afford to, including foreign aid agencies, log onto the
Internet through the few telephone lines provided by neighboring Pakistan. Users, both official and private, log on to Internet service providers in Pakistan in the absence of such facilities in
Afghanistan.
Muttawakil said the Taliban were unable to restrict or control the use of the Internet because access to it was through Pakistani telephone lines.
The hardline Taliban movement
follow a strict interpretation of Islam, not shared by other Muslim countries.
Muttawakil said the Taliban wanted to keep society away from trends promoting obscenity and immorality through the
Internet.
AIP did not say when the ban was imposed and how the Taliban planned to ensure that telephone lines were not being used to access the Internet.
But most Taliban decisions and edicts on
conduct are ruthlessly enforced by their powerful religious police working under the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice.