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  • Rising Crime in Afghanistan: Citizens Say Taliban Are Behind Most Cases May 5, 2026
  • Local elders broker fragile ceasefire between Taliban, Pakistan in Kunar May 5, 2026
  • Catalan Parliament Voices Concern Over Hazaras Situation In Afghanistan May 5, 2026
  • Afghanistan’s powerlifting team to compete in Belarus competitions May 5, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – May 5, 2026 May 5, 2026
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  • Tolo News in Dari – May 4, 2026 May 4, 2026
  • Afghanistan National Team to Play in Maldives Four-Nation Tournament May 4, 2026
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Afghanistan: 113 New Cases of COVID-19, 10 Deaths Reported

24th April, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: The Ministry of Public Health on Saturday reported 113 new positive cases of COVID-19 out of 1,137 samples tested in the last 24 hours. The ministry reported that the cumulative total of known COVID-19 cases is 58,843, the total number of reported deaths is 2,582, and the total number of recoveries is 52,392. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Afghanistan |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – April 23, 2021

23rd April, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

At Least 15 Killed In Traffic Accident In Southern Afghanistan

23rd April, 2021 · admin

Radio Free Afghanistan
April 23, 2021

At least 15 people were killed when a truck and passenger bus collided in Afghanistan’s southern province of Zabul.

Regional spokesman Gul Islam Sial told RFE/RL on April 23 that at least 12 more people were injured in the overnight crash that occurred in the Shar-e Safa district of the province.

An oil tanker truck was involved in the collision with a passenger bus along the Kabul-Kandahar highway, according to the head of the health department of the province, Lal Mohammad Tokhi.

Sial blamed the accident on poor roads.

According to the officials, the passengers were heading back to their homes from southern province of Helmand.

Afghanistan’s poorly maintained roads, as well as reckless driving by motorists, cause dozens of deaths annually.

With reporting by dpa

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036
Posted in Traffic accidents | Tags: Zabul |

Dostum’s Aide Accuses Govt of ‘Dictatorship’ over New Appointment

23rd April, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: Reacting to the appointment of new governor of Faryab, Babur Farahmand, a top aide to Marshal Abdul Rashid Dostum on Friday accused the government of adopting “dictatorial approach” on issues while the country is in need of national unity. On Friday, the Independent Directorate of Local Governance (IDLG) announced that Mohammad Daud will replace Naqibullah Fayeq as new governor of Faryab. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Political News | Tags: Ashraf Ghani Power Grab, Dostum, Faryab, Mohammad Daud, Naqibullah Fayeq (Faiq) |

188 New Cases of COVID-19, 7 Deaths Reported in Afghanistan

23rd April, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: The Ministry of Public Health Friday reported 188 new positive cases of COVID-19 out of 1,525 samples tested in the last 24 hours. The ministry reported that the cumulative total of known COVID-19 cases is 58,730, the total number of reported deaths is 2,572, and the total number of recoveries is 52,363. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Afghanistan |

Afghan refs make history after being selected for AFC Cup matches

23rd April, 2021 · admin

Ariana: The Afghan Football Federation has announced that Afghanistan’s Halim Agha Shirzad, an accredited international referee, has been selected as a referee for the B and C group stages of the AFC Cup matches in the West Asian region. Nangiali Sadat has also been selected as an assistant referee for Group B and C matches. This is the first time Afghan referees will take part in Asia club tournaments. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Sports News

  • Afghan Boxer Zakaria Zamani to Face His Iranian Rival
Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Boxing, Football (Soccer), History Making Event |

Afghan Girls from Robotic Team on Forbes Under 30 Asia List

23rd April, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: Five teenage girls from Afghan Girls Robotic Team are among the 20 honorees on this year’s Forbes Under 30 Asia list who are 21 or younger. The girls are famous for developing low-cost devices and their recent effort to make a ventilator. It has not been approved by officials but their efforts were hailed by many. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Science and Technology |

Afghanistan Sees Resurgence Of Warlords, In Familiar Echo Of Civil War

22nd April, 2021 · admin

Alipoor (also known as Commander Shamsheer)

Frud Bezhan
Mustafa Sarwar
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
April 22, 2021

Afghanistan’s powerful former warlords are remobilizing their old militias in anticipation of what many expect to be a bloody new chapter in a decades-old conflict.

Armed groups loyal to regional and local strongmen have rearmed and reappeared in the country’s northern, western, and central regions in recent months. The former militias have vowed to defend against a possible Taliban takeover, although they have clashed with government forces in some areas.

The resurgence of the warlords comes amid waning confidence in the weak Afghan government and beleaguered Afghan security forces ahead of the complete withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan by September.

There are fears that the return of the private militias — many organized along ethnic lines — could further undermine support for the Afghan government and drag Afghanistan back into the chaos of the 1990s.

During its brutal civil war from 1992 to 1996, Afghanistan descended into lawlessness as warlords and the Taliban carved up the country into fiefdoms. Rival ethnic militias fought pitched battles for control of Kabul, killing some 100,000 people and leaving the capital in tatters.

Ali Adili, a researcher at the Afghanistan Analysts Network, an independent think tank in Kabul, says the international military presence kept in check many of the country’s former strongmen, who received high-ranking roles within the government in a nod to national unity after the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.

But he says that could change after foreign troops leave.

“The possibility that these power brokers might fall back to unpredictable behavior cannot be ruled out,” says Adili. “Especially if the international military withdrawal is accompanied by international political disengagement from Afghanistan.”

Public Show Of Force

Many Afghans fear the U.S. and NATO pullout will kill the sputtering peace process between the Afghan government and the Taliban, emboldening that militant group to retake the country by force.

Observers say Afghanistan’s 300,000-strong national army and police force — deprived of crucial U.S. air support, intelligence, and logistics — would struggle to fend off any Taliban onslaught.

Such a scenario could lead to the collapse of the Western-backed Afghan government and ignite a new civil war.

To assuage those fears, former warlords have vowed to protect their communities.

But many of these same notorious figures have been implicated in gross human rights abuses over the decades.

In a public show of force, Ismail Khan, one of Afghanistan’s most prominent former warlords, paraded hundreds of his militiamen at a rally in the western city of Herat on April 18.

Armed with assault rifles, the  militiamen chanted, “Allahu Akbar,” or “God is great,” as Khan vowed to “defend the people of Herat.”

“We hope for a real peace,” Khan says, calling on the Taliban to negotiate an end to the war. “But if there isn’t one, people shouldn’t worry. We will defend their honor and dignity. We won’t let anyone trample on them.”

Khan, an ethnic Tajik, claimed hundreds of “armed mujahedin” had been deployed in all districts of Herat Province, of which Herat city is the capital. The Taliban, a predominately Pashtun group, controls large swaths of the countryside around the city.

Many of the country’s former warlords, including Khan, are ex-commanders of the mujahedin, the Western-backed Islamist groups that fought the Soviet Army in Afghanistan in the 1980s and later the Taliban.

Khan warned the government, which he described as “incompetent,” that there would be a “reaction” if it tried to disarm the “mujahedin,” employing a term loaded with symbolism by the role that such Islamic fighters’ played in the Soviet-Afghan War especially.

‘Fight Against Injustice’

Khan’s comments came just days after Zulfiqar Omid, a Hazara activist and politician, on April 13 announced the creation of a “resistance front” in the province of Daikundi, in central Afghanistan.

In a Facebook post, Omid said the militia had been formed to “fight against injustice and discrimination” and provide security in Daikundi, a relatively peace province that has been recently hit by militant attacks. The fighters are led by Mohammad Ali Sadaqat, a mujahedin-era commander.

In photos accompanying his post, Omid is seen walking through a column of militiamen brandishing AK-47 Kalashnikov rifles.

In an interview with RFE/RL, Omid says he supports peace efforts with the Taliban. But he says it is unclear what a postwar Afghanistan will look like under the current peace process.

“Our people don’t feel safe,” Omid says in reference to the Shi’ite Hazara minority. “They are worried. Over the past 20 years, we have been the target of terrorists.”

Dasht-e Barchi, a predominately Hazara neighborhood in Kabul, has been the scene of a string of gruesome attacks by the Taliban and Islamic State (IS) militants who have killed hundreds in recent years.

Soldiers, police officers, and even armed, plainclothes civilians — paid and trained by the government — patrol the neighborhood. There have been growing calls for the community, where suspicion of the government is rife and anger is widespread, to take its security into its own hands.

Outside of the capital, militants have kidnapped and executed Hazara civilians and stormed Hazara areas in attacks that have forced thousands to flee their homes.

During their oppressive rule throughout the late ’90s, the Taliban terrorized the Hazara, wrestling control of Hazara regions in Afghanistan through a campaign of targeted killings and what rights groups have suggested amounted to ethnic cleansing.

Commander Sword

In the nearby province of Maidan Wardak, a Hazara militia led by Abdul Ghani Alipur, a local warlord, has been engaged in deadly clashes with government forces for months.

In January, the militia fought government forces over control of Behsud district, one of Alipur’s strongholds. When the government appointed a new police chief in the district, the decision triggered protests during which troops fired on demonstrators, killing 11.

In March, an Afghan military helicopter was downed in the area, killing nine security personnel. The government blamed Alipur’s militia and launched a manhunt for him, although he has yet to be apprehended.

The government has accused Alipur’s 300-strong militia of conducting criminal activities, including extortion, in the guise of fighting the Taliban. Alipur, known as Commander Sword, has said he is simply protecting Hazaras from the Taliban.

Despite the accusations against him, Alipur has enjoyed the support of powerful Hazara leaders and remains popular with the community, which has been embittered by what many see as government inaction in the face of deadly militant attacks against the minority group.

“For several years now, we have been witnessing the killing of our loved ones by the Taliban,” says Sharifa Ahmadi. She says her husband, a civil rights activist, was stopped and shot dead by the Taliban in September 2018 along a highway in the Jalrez district of Maidan Wardak.

“Alipur is someone who fights against terrorists and defends his people,” says the widowed 27-year-old. “Why does the government not support him and sends troops to arrest him?”

Ex-Militant Leader

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, one of Afghanistan’s most notorious ex-warlords and a former militant leader, has staged several rallies in Kabul in recent months.

Hundreds of his supporters have taken to the streets of the capital to demand the resignation of the government and the establishment of a transitional authority to oversee the peace process.

Hekmatyar’s armed supporters have also rallied in the provinces. Hundreds of men toting rifles and hoisting flags protested in the northeastern province of Badakhshan on April 13.

Hekmatyar’s party claimed that in the absence of government forces his armed fighters were able to secure the province’s Baharak district from the Taliban.

Hekmatyar’s Hezb-e Islami militant group signed a controversial peace deal with the government in 2016. The 72-year-old, a Pashtun, has since taken over the leadership of the Hezb-e Islami political party.

The reappearance of Hekmatyar’s armed supporters has fueled fear that the radical Islamist could violently lash out if his interests are harmed in the peace process.

Adili of the Afghanistan Analysts Network says there are several reasons why ethnic militias are rearming and reappearing.

“Certain communities will rely on these figures for protection in a scenario in which the peace process falls apart and the state apparatus breaks down,” he says.

“Ethnic communities also want to maximize their leverage — either in negotiations over a peace settlement or on the battlefield if the Taliban attempts a military takeover of the country.”

DDR Program

There is a precedent for rearming militias in Afghanistan, where the government has used them to fend off the Taliban.

With support from the Afghan Interior Ministry, U.S. forces trained and armed the Afghan Local Police (ALP), an 18,000-strong force of pro-government village militias spread across the country.

Earlier in the war, the United States spent millions on a Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) program for the country’s former warlords. But a decade later, Washington changed course and rearmed many of the same militias.

The government-sponsored militias were intended to provide security in remote villages across rural Afghanistan where the Taliban-led insurgency were strongest. The force proved successful in some areas but were accused of human rights abuses in other areas.

In theory, these local militias were meant to come under the command of the existing Afghan national security forces hierarchy. But in reality, their allegiances lay with local warlords.

Funding for the ALP ended in September 2020. Parts of the force are expected to be disbanded. The majority are planned to be incorporated into the Afghan police force and national army.

Even if the ALP is disbanded, the government is still bankrolling local militias out of growing desperation to curb a resurgent Taliban.

Observers say the biggest concern about pro-government militias is the strain they could impose on the institutional coherence of the Afghan security forces. That strain, observers say, could lead to the crumbling of the government forces along factional, tribal, and ethnic lines.

That was the case in the early 1990s, when such a fragmentation precipitated the fall of the communist Afghan government and led to civil war.

The rise of ethnic militias fueled regional proxy warfare, with neighboring countries arming and funding various groups in Afghanistan.

Rahmatullah Amiri, a Kabul-based political analyst, says progovernment militias can stop the Taliban from making gains in the short-term. But he says the same militias will become a liability for the government in the future.

“There are many spoilers who will take advantage of militias,” he says. “It will lead to enormous human right abuses as we have already experienced in the past. The government’s legitimacy will be further called into question.”

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Ethnic Issues, History, Human Rights, Political News, Security, Taliban | Tags: Alipoor, Ashraf Ghani Government, Ashraf Ghani Government Security Failure, Hazaras, Hekmatyar, Ismail Khan, Mujahedin, Pashtuns, Tajiks |

Taliban Negotiators in Pakistan to Consult Leadership: Source

22nd April, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: The Taliban’s chief negotiator Mawlavi Abdul Hakim traveled to Pakistan from Doha to consult and seek guidance from Taliban leadership and find out whether the delay in the withdrawal of US forces will lead to a halt in the talks and Istanbul conference, or if there are other ways to proceed, sources close to the group said on Thursday. Referring to the trip, Afghanistan’s First Vice President Amrullah Saleh said that the Taliban’s delegation visited Pakistan to seek guidance from the Pakistan’s intelligence agencies. “Whenver there is a stalemate in the talks in Qatar, they (Taliban) say that we are going to consult our elders, in reality, ‘elders’ means that ‘we are going to seek suggestions from the ISI and the {Pakistani} army,’” said Saleh. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Peace Talks, Security, Taliban | Tags: Pakistan takeover of Afghanistan via Taliban, Taliban - Pakistani asset |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – April 22, 2021

22nd April, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |
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