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Taliban govt clearing ‘un-Islamic’ books from Afghanistan shelves

Authorities have not gone from shop to shop checking for banned books, an official with the provincial information department and a Herat bookseller said. (AFP/File)
Authorities have not gone from shop to shop checking for banned books, an official with the provincial information department and a Herat bookseller said. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 November 2024

Taliban govt clearing ‘un-Islamic’ books from Afghanistan shelves

Taliban govt clearing ‘un-Islamic’ books from Afghanistan shelves
  • Committee identified 400 titles “that conflicted with Islamic and Afghan values”

KABUL: Checking imported books, removing texts from libraries and distributing lists of banned titles — Taliban authorities are working to remove “un-Islamic” and anti-government literature from circulation.
The efforts are led by a commission established under the Ministry of Information and Culture soon after the Taliban swept to power in 2021 and implemented their strict interpretation of Islamic law, or sharia.
In October, the ministry announced the commission had identified 400 books “that conflicted with Islamic and Afghan values, most of which have been collected from the markets.”
The department in charge of publishing has distributed copies of the Qur'an and other Islamic texts to replace seized books, the ministry statement said.
The ministry has not provided figures for the number of removed books, but two sources, a publisher in Kabul and a government employee, said texts had been collected in the first year of Taliban rule and again in recent months.
“There is a lot of censorship. It is very difficult to work, and fear has spread everywhere,” the Kabul publisher told AFP.
Books were also restricted under the previous foreign-backed government ousted by the Taliban, when there was “a lot of corruption, pressures and other issues,” he said.
But “there was no fear, one could say whatever he or she wanted to say,” he added.
“Whether or not we could make any change, we could raise our voices.”

AFP received a list of five of the banned titles from an information ministry official.
It includes “Jesus the Son of Man” by renowned Lebanese-American author Khalil Gibran, for containing “blasphemous expressions,” and the “counterculture” novel “Twilight of the Eastern Gods” by Albanian author Ismail Kadare.
“Afghanistan and the Region: A West Asian Perspective” by Mirwais Balkhi, an education minister under the former government, was also banned for “negative propaganda.”
During the Taliban’s previous rule from 1996 to 2001, there were comparatively few publishing houses and booksellers in Kabul, the country having already been wracked by decades of war.
Today, thousands of books are imported each week alone from neighboring Iran — which shares the Persian language with Afghanistan — through the Islam Qala border crossing in western Herat province.
Taliban authorities rifled through boxes of a shipment at a customs warehouse in Herat city last week.
One man flipped through a thick English-language title, as another, wearing a camouflage uniform with a man’s image on the shoulder patch, searched for pictures of people and animals in the books.
“We have not banned books from any specific country or person, but we study the books and we block those that are contradictory to religion, sharia or the government, or if they have photos of living things,” said Mohammad Sediq Khademi, an official with the Herat department for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (PVPV).
“Any books that are against religion, faith, sect, sharia... we will not allow them,” the 38-year-old told AFP, adding the evaluations of imported books started some three months ago.
Images of living things — barred under some interpretations of Islam — are restricted according to a recent “vice and virtue” law that codifies rules imposed since the Taliban returned to power, but the regulations have been unevenly enforced.
Importers have been advised of which books to avoid, and when books are deemed unsuitable, they are given the option of returning them and getting their money back, Khademi said.
“But if they can’t, we don’t have any other option but to seize them,” he added.
“Once, we had 28 cartons of books that were rejected.”

Authorities have not gone from shop to shop checking for banned books, an official with the provincial information department and a Herat bookseller said, asking not to be named.
However, some books have been removed from Herat libraries and Kabul bookstores, a bookseller told AFP, also asking for anonymity, including “The History of Jihadi Groups in Afghanistan” by Afghan author Yaqub Mashauf.
Books bearing images of living things can still be found in Herat shops.
In Kabul and Takhar — a northern province where booksellers said they had received the list of 400 banned books — disallowed titles remained on some shelves.
Many non-Afghan works were banned, one seller said, “so they look at the author, whose name is there, and they are mostly banned” if they’re foreign.
His bookshop still carried translations of Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s “The Gambler” and fantasy novel “Daughter of the Moon Goddess” by Sue Lynn Tan.
But he was keen to sell them “very cheap” now, to clear them from his stock.


Call of Duty Black Ops 7: Activision Blizzard promises ‘biggest, unmatched’ franchise story ahead of Riyadh launch

Call of Duty Black Ops 7: Activision Blizzard promises ‘biggest, unmatched’ franchise story ahead of Riyadh launch
Updated 08 November 2025

Call of Duty Black Ops 7: Activision Blizzard promises ‘biggest, unmatched’ franchise story ahead of Riyadh launch

Call of Duty Black Ops 7: Activision Blizzard promises ‘biggest, unmatched’ franchise story ahead of Riyadh launch
  • Arab News received an exclusive invitation to preview and test the game before its launch at SEF Arena on Friday, Nov. 14
  • Latest chapter of franchise could mark a turning point for the game, but publisher believes it can live up to its hype

LONDON: Activision Blizzard’s latest installment, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, is being touted by the studio as “the biggest, best, and unmatched” entry in franchise history ahead of its regional launch in Riyadh.

“Unpredictable, mind-bending; things that Black Ops does best,” said Stephanie Snowden, senior director of studio communications at Activision, during the game preview to media earlier this week.

“Experience matters. With global progression coming across the game, no matter where you’re playing or what you’re playing, we are making sure that Black Ops 7 is extremely rewarding. We want to value your time.”

Arab News received an exclusive invitation to preview and test the game before its launch in Riyadh on Friday, Nov. 14.

Part of the team behind Black Ops 7 at the presentation of the game to the media. (Supplied)

The latest addition to the blockbuster first-person shooter franchise — which has sold more than 500 million copies and attracts in excess of 100 million monthly players — is packed with new features, marking what industry insiders see as a major positive shift after recent years of stagnation.

Black Ops 6, released in 2024, received mixed reviews and was banned in Kuwait due to cultural sensitivities surrounding its Gulf War-era setting, reflecting ongoing challenges for global blockbusters set in politically charged eras.

Developed by a coalition of studios including Raven Software, Infinity Ward, Treyarch, and Sledgehammer Games, Black Ops 7 was produced in record time — about two years, compared to the typical three or four — having been greenlit alongside Black Ops 6 to preserve franchise momentum.

Set in 2035, ten years after the events of Call of Duty: Black Ops II, the campaign features returning characters including Mike Harper (voiced by Michael Rooker) and Troy Marshall (played by Y’lan Noel). Players follow JSOC Commander David “Section” Mason (Milo Ventimiglia) and his special ops team “Specter One” as they confront the apparent return of Raul Menendez — a notorious Nicaraguan arms dealer turned populist leader who threatens global apocalypse.

“The team’s had a lot of fun exploring what (the game) looks like in terms of weapons, settings and aesthetics — giving players the tools and advanced weaponry to make that jump into a new era,” Snowden said.

The game also introduces several new features exclusive to Black Ops 7, which its producers promise will make the player’s experience more personalized and engaging than ever before.

The chapter introduced the Co-Op Campaign, a narrative-driven experience where players can play solo or with friends, the Overclock System, a new progression mechanic for multiplayer that allows players to unlock and customize upgrades for lethals, tacticals, field upgrades and scorestreaks, enhanced movement thanks to the expanded omnimovement system, offering more creative gameplay opportunities and new multiplayer modes, including Overload— the competitive 6v6 mode for the Call of Duty League — and Skirmish, a large-scale 20v20 objective-based mode with enhanced mobility features.

The story also features a new Endgame Mode, a 32-player co-op experience (in squads of four) with narrative elements, allowing players to explore Avalon, a fictional city in the Mediterranean, and complete assignments. The game’s iconic Zombies mode introduces major innovations including the largest round-based map ever in Black Ops Zombies history, Ashes of the Damned, and four total modes at launch: Standard, Directed, Cursed (for hardcore players), and Survival, which returns after 13 years since Black Ops 2.

“If you don’t know what Zombies is, that’s (basically) Call of Duty,” joked Ben Lewis, associate communication director at Treyarch, during the event. “It’s (a) very tough (mode), and there are some mysteries that we won’t divulge.”

Besides offering players a new “massive arsenal” of weapons and “personalized scorestreaks,” the developers have focused heavily on upgrading visuals using the latest GPU technology, making the graphics seen in Black Ops 6 feel outdated by comparison.

Beyond these flashy new features, the decision to host the regional launch in Riyadh highlights ֱ’s rapidly growing importance as a gaming and esports hub. Activision described the event as a “major milestone” for the Kingdom’s gaming community and the wider Middle East, reaffirming its commitment to supporting the region’s thriving gaming ecosystem and engaging fans throughout the MEA region.

In the lead-up to the Riyadh launch at SEF Arena, BLVD City — a major event co-organized with the Saudi Esports Federation — Activision has raised anticipation to new heights. The key question remains; can Black Ops 7 live up to the hype?

As Rooker put it to Arab News: “I had a blast making the game. And I know so many people put absolutely major effort into making this the best game possible. That’s quality, and people who enjoy gaming, that’s what they want. And I think fans — whether from the Middle East or some other places — are going to love this game. Plain and simple. It’s gonna be amazing.”