Afghanistan's new rulers said they hoped to persuade people to abide by the new rule, rather than force them.
The
stricture would be a return to one of the strict rules of the Taliban's
1990s emirate, when most forms of music were banned, apart from
religious chants.
The chief spokesman for the
movement announced the new ban in an interview where he tried to stress
that the movement had changed since its first government.
“Music
is forbidden in Islam,” Zabiullah Mujahid told the New York Times, “but
we’re hoping that we can persuade people not to do such things, instead
of pressuring them.”
The Taliban permitted
religious singing during their former government, but regarded other
forms of music to be a distraction that could encourage impure thoughts.
The sight of clumps of tape torn from confiscated music cassettes and
hung from trees became one of the abiding images of their 1990s regime.
Radio
and TV stations have stopped broadcasting music in recent days except
for Islamic songs, but it had not been clear if this was because of
Taliban orders, or self censorship to avoid potential problems with the
insurgents.
The restriction on music came despite
the movement saying it has moved on in the past 20 years and is intent
on rebuilding Afghanistan.
“We want to build the future, and forget what happened in the past,” Mr Mujahid said.
Afghanistan: Taliban to ban music in public, says it's forbidden in Islam

The Taliban will ban music in public their spokesman has said, because the movement considers it un-Islamic.
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