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Taliban to Enforce Hindu 'Badges'

Afghanistan's Taliban rulers already criticized for their treatment of women, want to make Hindus wear an identity label to distinguish them from Muslims.

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Afghanistan's Taliban rulers already isolated by their harsh brand of Islam and poor treatment of women announced plans to make Hindus wear an identity label on their clothing to distinguish them from Muslims.

The hardline Taliban regime that controls 95 percent of this poor Central Asian state plans to enforce the new policy soon, Mohammed Wali, religious police minister, told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The plan still must be approved by the Taliban's reclusive leader Mullah Mohammed Omar.

The law would also make it mandatory for Hindu women to veil themselves just like Muslim women of Afghanistan, Wali said.

The proposal reminiscent of the yellow Star of David that Jews were forced to wear in Nazi Germany prompted an angry statement from Hindu-dominated India.

"We absolutely deplore such orders which patently discriminate against minorities," Raminder Singh Jassal, an Indian foreign ministry spokesman, told reporters in New Delhi. "It is further evidence of the backward and unacceptable ideological underpinning of the Taliban."

In the central Indian city of Bhopal, dozens of protesters from the Hindu fundamentalist group Bajrang Dal marched Tuesday, shouting angry slogans and carrying an effigy of a Taliban soldier with a beard and a green scarf. "Taliban, die!" some chanted.

The National Volunteers Corps, a fundamentalist movement that is the ideological parent of India's ruling Hindu nationalist party, condemned the Taliban.

"It is in line with the Taliban's interpretation of Islam, a religion which divides humanity into two: the believers and the infidels," said Baburao Vaidya, a spokesman for the corps, known by its Hindi acronym RSS.

"We criticize the very fundamentals of Islamic tenets," he told The Associated Press.

The decision could further isolate the orthodox Islamic militia, already under fire from the West for alleged discriminatory policies toward ethnic and religious minorities, human rights abuses and poor treatment of women.

In recent years, many Hindus and other members of religious minorities have left Afghanistan because of Taliban policies.

Wali said the latest Taliban move is in line with Islam. "Religious minorities living in an Islamic state must be identified," the minister said.

The Taliban have not yet decided what sort of an identity label Hindus will have to wear, he added.

There are at least 5,000 Hindus living in Kabul. Thousands of other Hindus live in other Afghan cities, but there are no reliable figures on exactly how many.

The new law will be meant for only Hindus because there are no Christians or Jews in Afghanistan and Sikhs can be easily recognized by their turbans, Wali said. However, at least one Jew is known to live in the Afghan capital of Kabul and there may also be some Christians.

It was unclear whether foreigners living in Afghanistan would be required to wear the identity label.

Anar, an Afghan Hindu in Kabul who uses just one name, said he does not want to wear a label identifying him as Hindu.

"It will make us vulnerable and degrade our position in the society," he said.

But Munawaar Hasan, general secretary of a major Islamic political party in neighboring Pakistan called Jamaat-e-Islami, or Islamic Party, said the move seems aimed to give protection to Hindus.

"The Taliban should win praise for this step,' he said. "Providing protection to religious minorities is a must in any Islamic country and this step seems in line with this concept."

The Taliban follow a harsh version of Islam that bars women from most jobs and education, and makes it mandatory for men to wear beards and pray five times a day. All forms of light entertainment, including television and music, are outlawed.

The Taliban drew worldwide criticism when in March they destroyed two ancient statues of Buddha in central Bamiyan, calling it their religious duty.

Most of the Islamic world, including pro-Taliban Pakistan, differ with the Taliban regime's narrow interpretation of Islam and say that it is tarnishing Islam's image.

The Taliban face U.N. sanctions for giving protection to Saudi billionaire Osama bin Laden, wanted by Washington for allegedly running a global terrorist network. The Taliban deny the charge and say the United States has no evidence against him.

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