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Recent Posts

  • Afghans & Activists Rally In 14 Cities In Support Of Herat Protesters June 16, 2026
  • Fazlur Rehman urges Pakistan to pursue reconciliation with Afghanistan June 16, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – June 16, 2026 June 16, 2026
  • Former Afghan President Welcomes Finalised US-Iran Agreement June 15, 2026
  • 3.7 Million Children In Afghanistan Face Acute Malnutrition, Says UN June 15, 2026
  • Armored Tank Sales: How Did Taliban’s District 11 Commander Finance Four Marriages? June 15, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – June 15, 2026 June 15, 2026
  • EU Set To Host Taliban For First Time Despite Outcry Over Human Rights Violations June 14, 2026
  • Member of National Islamic Movement Missing After Returning to Afghanistan June 14, 2026
  • Smartphone Ban: Another Step by Akhundzada to Silence Voices and Hide the Truth in Afghanistan June 14, 2026

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Afghans & Activists Rally In 14 Cities In Support Of Herat Protesters

16th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Afghanistan International: Afghans and civil society activists in 14 cities worldwide rallied under the slogan “Education, Work and Freedom”, calling for an end to repression and restrictions in Afghanistan. The demonstrations in Herat, which started last week in Jebrail township, have now become a symbol of global solidarity with Afghan women. From Tehran to Brussels and from Helsinki to Vancouver, protesters gathered to demand an end to the suppression of women and girls in Afghanistan. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights | Tags: Herat, Protest |

Fazlur Rehman urges Pakistan to pursue reconciliation with Afghanistan

16th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Fazlur Rehman

Ariana: Maulana Fazlur Rehman, chief of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-F (JUI-F), has called on Pakistan to adopt a more conciliatory approach toward Afghanistan, arguing that regional stability depends on constructive engagement rather than confrontation. Addressing Pakistan’s parliament, Fazlur Rehman said Islamabad should apply the same diplomatic principles to Afghanistan that it advocates in other regional disputes. Referring to efforts aimed at preventing conflict between the United States and Iran, he argued that Pakistan should similarly seek dialogue and reconciliation with its western neighbor. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations |

Tolo News in Dari – June 16, 2026

16th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Former Afghan President Welcomes Finalised US-Iran Agreement

15th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Hamid Karzai

Afghanistan International: Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai has welcomed the finalisation of a memorandum of understanding between the United States and Iran aimed at ending the conflict and resolving disputes through negotiations. He said the agreement would benefit both sides, the region and the wider world. In a message posted on X, Karzai also expressed appreciation for the diplomatic efforts of Pakistan, Qatar and other regional countries that helped facilitate the understanding. Click here to read more (external link).

More

  • Afghan FM welcomes Iran-U.S. agreement to end war
Posted in Iran-Afghanistan Relations, Political News, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Hamid Karzai |

3.7 Million Children In Afghanistan Face Acute Malnutrition, Says UN

15th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Afghanistan International: The organisation said that with the peak malnutrition season beginning in July, conditions are expected to worsen in the coming months. Without immediate intervention and adequate support, the scale of the crisis is likely to expand further. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Children, Health News | Tags: Malnutrition |

Armored Tank Sales: How Did Taliban’s District 11 Commander Finance Four Marriages?

15th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

8am: Findings by the Hasht-e Subh Daily reveal that Nasir Ahmad Ahmadi, the commander of Taliban Security District 11 in Kabul, dismantled and sold several old Soviet-era armored vehicles and equipment approximately two years ago in Zone 315 and the Baba Jan Garrison. According to the findings, Ahmadi scrapped six tanks from these sites, reducing them to scrap metal before selling them. The report also indicates that he had the scrap metal weighed at various locations. In addition, since he was appointed district commander, Ahmadi has married three more times and has secured separate houses in Kabul for each of his four wives. The sale of these tanks for scrap prices by Taliban officials continues, even as the tanks are regarded as part of Afghanistan’s history. Citizens say the vehicles should eventually be placed in museums, not melted down for scrap. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Corruption, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: Corrupt Taliban |

Tolo News in Dari – June 15, 2026

15th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

EU Set To Host Taliban For First Time Despite Outcry Over Human Rights Violations

14th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

Daud Khattak
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
June 14, 2026

The European Union is preparing to host the Taliban in Brussels for the first time for “technical talks” on the repatriation of Afghans despite sharp criticism from rights groups and signs Afghanistan’s rulers are cracking down further on women.

The 27-member bloc doesn’t recognize the Taliban-led government, but it has scheduled to meet a delegation from the Afghan Islamist regime — led by Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi — in June, likely on June 22 or 23.

The delegation visiting Brussels will meet with senior officials from the European Commission, the European External Action Service (EEAS), and representatives of several member states, including Sweden.

Preparations for the talks have raised major objections from many quarters, especially after revelations in the UN Security Council that nearly 3.8 million Afghan girls remained barred from education and an estimated 250,000 more are excluded each year.

An EU spokesman reiterated during a recent news conference that “engagement doesn’t mean recognition.”

But that did little to assuage critics of the meetings as part of initiatives across the bloc to ease immigration and increase returns of immigrants to their home countries.

“This is a grave mistake,” according to Shagofah Ghafori from the Brussels-based independent think tank CEPS.

“At best, Brussels is kowtowing to narrow political pressures; at worst, it’s normalizing a regime of gender apartheid and terror — and all in exchange for a short-term ‘fix’ on migration that comes at the expense of core values and long-term security.”

Undelivered Promises

The Taliban seized power in August 2021 as international forces withdrew from Afghanistan two decades after the militants had been ousted from power.

Taliban leaders promised Afghans would have more freedoms and rights than under the strict regime that previously held power. But the Taliban-led government has failed to live up to its pledges, cracking down hard on many groups, especially women and girls.

In the latest sign of how deep the oppression runs, last week Taliban authorities reportedly arrested or detained an unspecified number of women in Afghanistan’s western Herat Province for allegedly not properly observing the Taliban rules for wearing a veil.

The next day, the Taliban morality police opened fire on women in the city after they launched a protest against their lack of rights and freedoms. Eyewitnesses reported the death of at least one protester in the unrest. The Taliban has not confirmed any casualties or arrests.

Saskia Bricmont — an MP from Belgium and one of the initiators of a letter to the government arguing the Taliban regime is responsible for “massive and systematic human rights violations,” impacting women, girls, journalists, human rights defenders, and minorities — said allowing Taliban representatives in Brussels would send a “deeply troubling” political signal.

“Our commitment to human rights and democratic values must remain non-negotiable,” Bricmont told RFE/RL.

Hannah Neumann, another member of the EU Parliament, wrote on social media that by allowing the Taliban presence in Brussels “we would legitimize a regime that systematically oppresses women on the international stage.”

Taliban Crackdown Continues

In a sign of how the Taliban crackdown is showing no signs of letting up, the hard-line regime in late May adopted a new law legalizing the marriage of girls as young as 9 years old. The Taliban’s reclusive chief Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada has also reportedly issued new directives banning the use of smart phones.

Earlier, the Taliban authorities had ordered the closures of three more radio stations for what the regime called failure to pay their taxes, not being licensed, and substandard broadcasts.

In the same directive, the Taliban urged other radio stations to align their programming with “Islamic principles and ethics.”

According to Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Taliban-ruled Afghanistan ranks 175th in the latest edition of the World Press Freedom Index. Only Saudi Arabia, Iran, China, North Korea, and Eritrea were rated lower.

The RSF report stated that 43 percent of media outlets in Afghanistan had been closed since 2021, the year the Taliban forcefully took over Kabul. Since then, the RSF says, more than 165 media professionals have been arrested — including 25 in 2025 — and “journalism has been choked by relentless censorship.”

On June 8, the UN deputy special representative and head of the UN Mission in Afghanistan, Georgette Gagon, told the Security Council that an estimated 3.8 million Afghan girls aged 7-18 are unable to attend school.

She said approximately 250,000 more girls are permanently excluded from secondary education each year, creating a “lost generation of talent and potential.”

EU Officials In Kabul

Euractive, the Europe-based news website, claim that a visit by EU and Belgian officials to Kabul in January this year laid the groundwork for a follow-up meeting with Taliban representatives in Europe.

In a June 3 article published in the Guardian newspaper, former Afghan MP Fawzia Koofi wrote that she was about to write to EU diplomats seeking support for the release of her family members from Taliban detention when she heard the “shocking news” that the EU is inviting the militants to Brussels.

Koofi told RFE/RL that under the Taliban regime over the past five years, women have basically become second-class citizens — and the Taliban is “smart enough to use women’s rights as a bargaining chip.”

Quoting three EU officials, the Euractive report suggests the proposed talks with the Taliban will remain strictly technical in nature to avoid any perception of formal recognition of the regime.

In an interview with Euronews, European Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner said the EU and its members states must engage with governments like the Taliban for “technical talks” on migration.

Asked whether Germany is holding talks with the Taliban regarding the deportation of Afghans, he said that “this was necessary.”

According to the EU Agency for Asylum, many Western states have halted deportations to Afghanistan following the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul in 2021. The few cases of deportation include from Belgium in February 2023, Sweden via Uzbekistan, and Switzerland in October 2024.

The agency said Germany and Austria have deported Afghans whose asylum applications were rejected. They included the deportation of 28 Afghans “with criminal records” in August 2024 and another 81 in July 2025. Austria deported one Afghan “convicted of crime” in October 2025.

The 19 EU countries that asked for an “open dialogue” with the Taliban about the deportation of Afghans most notably include Belgium, Sweden, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands.

Afghan Applicant Flood

According to the European Council on Refugees and Exiles, more than 1.6 million Afghan nationals left their country since the Taliban takeover of Kabul in August 2021. In Europe, the agency says, Afghans remain the second-largest group of asylum applicants following people from Syria.

Brunner says EU experts were in Kabul for technical-level talks with the Taliban on the deportation of Afghans because he believes that “not getting engaged [with the Taliban] means it does not get better.”

Koofi, however, said she believes engagement by international community, including countries in the region, has emboldened the Taliban.

“The more engagement they receive from the international community, the more they suppress women,” she said.

Copyright (c) 2026. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • US lawmaker: Any effort to legitimize Taliban is reckless
Posted in EU-Afghanistan Relations, Human Rights, Refugees and Migrants | Tags: Betrayal of Afghan people, Escape from the Taliban, Life under Taliban rule |

Member of National Islamic Movement Missing After Returning to Afghanistan

14th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

8am: Relatives of Baharuddin Jowzjani, a member of the National Islamic Movement party led by Marshal Abdul Rashid Dostum, have claimed that he has gone missing after returning to the country at the invitation of the Taliban. They also claimed that he was arrested by Taliban intelligence and the Haqqani network. Since the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan, despite the announcement of a general amnesty by Taliban leader Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, there have been numerous reports of arrests, torture, and killings of former security personnel and civilians by the group’s fighters. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Dostum, Harakat-e Islami Afghanistan, National and Islamic Movement of Afghanistan, Taliban Amnesty Violation |

Smartphone Ban: Another Step by Akhundzada to Silence Voices and Hide the Truth in Afghanistan

14th June, 2026 · admin · Leave a comment

8am: Several government employees under Taliban control say the group has imposed a ban on smartphone use across all institutions. They add that the Taliban have warned that anyone defying the order will be referred to the group’s military court and have their smartphones destroyed. Employees say the measure was issued on the verbal order of the group’s Supreme Leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada. The Taliban have also destroyed the smartphones of several teachers at schools in Khost province, and on the same day, asked all of them to bring in their phones to be destroyed as proof of their “obedience and loyalty” to Akhundzada. Click here to read more (external link).

More

  • Taliban Begin Destroying Government Employees’ Smartphones in Balkh Province
Posted in Censorship, Taliban | Tags: Hibatullah Akhundzada, Life under Taliban rule, Phone ban in Afghanistan, Taliban Police State |
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