Security

Kabul implements motorbike ban to curb Taliban killings, crimes

AFP

An Afghan policeman searches a motorcyclist in Kabul on April 14. [Wakil Kohsar/AFP]

An Afghan policeman searches a motorcyclist in Kabul on April 14. [Wakil Kohsar/AFP]

KABUL -- Afghan authorities are banning motorcycles and scooters in Kabul in a bid to control rampant crime and stop assailants on two-wheelers from conducting targeted killings, officials said.

The ban, which takes effect Wednesday (April 15), comes after a string of assaults by armed men on motorbikes.

Delivery riders, who are seeing heavy demand amid Kabul's coronavirus lockdown, will be exempted.

"Most of the crimes in the city, including targeted killings and other crimes, are carried out using motorbikes," Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Arian told AFP Tuesday (April 14).

"We have therefore decided to ban the use of the motorbikes in Kabul city and its districts," he said.

Terrorism and crime

Afghan police are busy battling the Taliban as rampant poverty and rising unemployment have worsened Kabul's security situation, making drive-by shootings, car thefts and the snatching of phones and wallets commonplace.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a security official told AFP that the Taliban are conducting an increasing number of targeted killings of government officials.

"They all use motorbikes to do hit and runs," the official said, noting that street robberies by thieves on motorcycles and scooters were also on the rise.

Earlier this month, two of President Ashraf Ghani's bodyguards were fatally shot in separate attacks by armed men on motorbikes, according to the official.

Authorities have implemented motorcycle bans in some other parts of Afghanistan, but this is the first restriction in the capital.

"It improved the security in other provinces; it is going to improve the security in Kabul too," the official said.

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Government made this decision not to protect the lives of the common people, but to protect the lives of its own governmental officials. Two of the president's bodyguards have been killed over the past week, and now the government has made this decision. Why doesn’t the government take action to arrest the armed robbers in Kabul? They assassinate people every day in Kabul city.

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By banning motorbikes in Kabul city, the crimes committed by the Taliban and terrorists will not be reduced. Terrorists’ crimes can be controlled by thwarting their plans, which are made in various places and luxurious buildings in Kabul.

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