human rights group Amnesty International says The Taliban recently "massacred" and brutally tortured several members of the Hazara minority in Afghanistan.
This killings, which took place in early July in Ghazni province. Witnesses have given harrowing accounts this.
Taliban have tried to portray a more restrained image Since taking over the Afghan capital Kabul on Sunday.
The Hazara community is Afghanistan's third largest ethnic group. But Amnesty said the incident was a "horrifying indicator" of Taliban rule.
They mainly practise Shia Islam and have faced long-term discrimination and persecution in predominantly Sunni Afghanistan and Pakistan Amnesty said the nine Hazara men were killed between 4 and 6 July in Malistan district in the eastern Ghazni province.
The villagers said they had escaped to the mountains when fighting intensified between government forces and Taliban fighters. six men were allegedly shot and some in the head, and three were tortured to death.
According to witness accounts, one man was strangled with his own scarf and had his arm muscles sliced off. Another's body was shot to pieces.
One eyewitness said they asked the fighters why they inflicted such brutality on their people.
"When it is the time of conflict, everyone dies, it doesn't matter if you have guns or not. It is the time of war," a fighter allegedly said.
Amnesty's Secretary-General Agnès Callamard said: "The cold-blooded brutality of these killings is a reminder of the Taliban's past record, and a horrifying indicator of what Taliban rule may bring."
"These targeted killings are proof that ethnic and religious minorities remain at particular risk under Taliban rule in Afghanistan."
It added that mobile phone services have been cut in many of the areas that have been captured by the Taliban, and so information about the killing had not leaked out until now.
Amnesty called on the UN to investigate and protect those at risk.
The Taliban were known for their brutal rule of Afghanistan which deprived women and ethnic minorities of their rights, before they were ousted by a US-led coalition in 2001.
In a press conference following its takeover of Kabul, the militant group promised it would not launch revenge attacks on anyone who worked with US forces, and that it would also grant women rights under Islamic sharia law.
But a threat assessment prepared for the UN has warned that Taliban fighters have been going door-to-door to search for people who worked for Nato forces or the previous Afghan government.
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