Under the monarchy of
Zahir Shah, human rights were usually respected. As of 1949, the Afghan Prime Minister
Shah Mahmud Khan, increased press freedom, but these moves were soon reversed. The Press Law which was implemented in July 1965, gave considerable freedom to the press for the first time. While the press was mostly free, in some cases the King closed down media from dissidents that were considered threatening. The communist
Khalq republic that governed Afghanistan after the
Saur Revolution in 1978 was brutal, vigorously suppressing opposition. The government abducted and executed thousands of prisoners as well as rural civilian dissidents. In April 1987, Afghanistan ratified the
United Nations Convention against Torture (CAT), which prevents the state from inflicting
torture on any individual. New leader
Babrak Karmal promised to end the Khalq's brutality, which it partly did, but human rights abuses still continued. The government along with the
Soviets (during the
Soviet–Afghan War) intentionally targeted civilian settlements in rural areas. Under President
Mohammad Najibullah's reforms, freedom of expression was further improved but human rights overall remained restricted. In the 1990s, many atrocities were committed by various militias against civilians. Indiscriminate rocket attacks during the
Battle of Kabul, especially those by
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar's militia, killed thousands of civilians. The
Taliban, in power from 1996, imposed strong restrictions on women, performed public executions, and prevented international aid from entering the country for starving civilians. The presidential government of the
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, which previously ruled Afghanistan, from 2004 until the Taliban overthrew it in 2021, had a strong human rights framework in its constitution. A bill of rights was enshrined in chapter two of the
2004 Constitution of Afghanistan. The
right to life and liberty were constitutionally protected, as were the
right to a fair trial and the
presumption of innocence for all persons. That gave the Islamic Republic a strong human rights framework that was guaranteed to all citizens. == Contemporary human rights issues ==