Afghan Warrior Taliban strongly struck to the level of reporters of the Ethilaatroz that he died when he was tortured in the Kabul police station because of the demonstration.

A Taliban gunman stepped on my head and squeezed my face to the concrete, Nemat Naqdi, 28 years old, a movie reporter in Afghan's Etilaatroz Japanese newspaper, telling about the moment the Taliban intervened when he takes a protest

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Photo: AP

Naqdi and the video editor Taqi Darybibi, 22, said they were stripped by the Taliban, arrested the police station when they reported that women protest against Pakistan's involvement in Afghanistan and supported female rights party

Afghanists Neamatullah Naqdi (left) and Taqi Daryabi Take a picture of the wound at the Etilaatroz daily office in Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 10.

They hit me with my power so strong that I think I'm done, Naqdi on September 10 said.

This correspondent said his left eye was beaten to blood, serious injury, while the head was buzzing and didn't hear anything after being seven by the Taliban warrior.

When he was pressed on the floor, Naqdi was over he was too painful and told them not to just hit his back, the group of people turned to hit Naqdi's face, causing his face to flow blood.

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Photo: AP

Naqdi felt his neck or back could break.

NAQDI takes photos with wound tape on the face at the Etilaatroz daily office on September 10.

Darybi said that Taliban members kept torturing them for about 10 minutes.

They declared in a press conference that journalists were licensed to operate, but according to Islamic regulations.

DaryAbi takes photos with wounds on the face and body at Etilaatroz office in Kabul, Afghanistan on September 10.

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Photo: AP

Taliban has not commented on information about two journalists tortured.

Zaki Darybi, Editor-in-Chief of Etilaatroz, said he hoped the Taliban leadership would speak up by journalists with continuous and brutal torture and take action to punish related warriors.

Nemat Naqdi and Taqi Daryabi are among at least 14 journalists detained in two days when reporting protests in Kabul, according to the Journalist Protection Committee (CPJ).

The Taliban must immediately stop imprisoning journalists in Afghanistan, terminating using violence to them and allows communications to operate freedom, not afraid of being revenge, CPJ said in a statement.

Demonstrations take place in the Dasht-I-Barchi area in Kabul, mainly the habitat of Shia Hazara ethnic minorities, which is said to be the previous Taliban's goal.

The witnesses estimate crowds at demonstrations of about 300 to 500, are one of the largest protests since the Taliban controls Kabul.