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3 Afghan MMA Fighters Prepare for Fights Abroad

17th February, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: Nasratullah Akhonzada, an Afghan mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter, announced that he is prepared to attend an event in Russia in March hosted by the Absolute Championship Akhmat (ACA) organization. Another Afghan MMA fighter, Abdul Azim Badakhshi, has also announced a fight abroad. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Abdul Azim Badakhshi, Afghan MMA, Martial Arts, Nasrat Haqparast, Nasratullah Akhonzada |

NATO Exit Delay May Keep Afghan Peace Process on Ice

16th February, 2021 · admin

Jens Stoltenberg

Michael Hughes: NATO defense chiefs at their upcoming ministerial are expected to approve a plan to keep troops in Afghanistan beyond the May Doha agreement deadline due to the Taliban’s alleged failure to divorce al-Qaeda and the need to support intra-Afghan talks. However, the irony is the decision will ensure a nearly dead peace process will not be resuscitated any time soon.

The NATO resolute support mission currently has a total of 9,592 troops from 36 nations stationed in Afghanistan which includes 2,500 American soldiers. NATO Secretary-General Jan Stoltenberg ahead of the February 17-18 summit said the alliance will not withdraw troops “before the time is right.”

Click here to read more.

Posted in NATO-Afghanistan, Opinion/Editorial, Peace Talks, Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Weapons Biz Bankrolls Experts Pushing to Keep U.S. Troops in Afghanistan

16th February, 2021 · admin

Daily Beast: Earlier this month, a study group established by Congress recommended that President Joe Biden extend the May 1 deadline for withdrawing troops from America’s longest war. It’s a strategy that many experts say runs the risk of abrogating the U.S.-Taliban agreement and potentially setting back the potential peace process in Afghanistan—or even dooming it to failure. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Tolo News in Dari – February 16, 2021

16th February, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban urges complete withdrawal in open letter to Americans

16th February, 2021 · admin

Baradar

Ariana: Taliban Deputy Leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar says that there is no military solution to the long-term conflict in Afghanistan. In an open letter to the people of the United States, Mullah Baradar stated: “The past nineteen years have proven beyond any doubt that the Afghan issue cannot be resolved through the use of force or by alternating military strategies and generals.” Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Warring Sides Prepare for Spring Offensive Despite Peace Efforts
Posted in Peace Talks, Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar |

In Afghanistan’s Pashtun Heartland, Tribal Rule Supersedes State Law

16th February, 2021 · admin


Ahsan Arian
Abubakar Siddique
February 15, 2021

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty

Mohammad Ayaz lost two family members last summer in a clash with a rival family over an irrigation channel in southeastern Afghanistan.

Ayaz lives near Gardez, the capital of Afghanistan’s southeastern Paktia Province. He says he lost his son and nephew in the July clash while two of his brothers and a nephew were severely injured. “One of them lost his kidney while the other was crippled when his leg was amputated,” he said.

He says local authorities failed to act a month earlier, when he requested protection from a powerful rival family in his village. His real troubles began, however, after his case made it to a local court in Gardez.

“The judges asked me for a Toyota Corolla car and a $20,000 bribe to favor me in the case, but I am too poor to pay such money,” he said while explaining how several members of his family are still detained despite suffering injuries. “How can I expect justice now?”

Judges in Gardez refused to talk to Radio Free Afghanistan to discuss specific cases or even comment generally. Local attorneys and administrative officials, however, reject the widespread view that Afghan courts are either inefficient or corrupt. Many Afghans, especially those in Paktia and other southeastern provinces, still prefer settling disputes by tribal laws despite the international community spending hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to resurrect the Afghan judiciary.

In Loya Paktia or Greater Paktia, which includes the provinces of Paktia, Paktika, and Khost, most of the region’s predominant Pashtun residents maintain that they trust the local tribal leaders administering traditional laws in informal tribal councils over government courts.

Unlike many litigants in state courts, many of those who turn to tribal law say they are happy with their choice. Mukhlis Ahmadzai, another Paktia resident, says the tribal justice system saved him when he accidentally killed a child with his car.

Ahmadzai says that while attending to the injured child, he informed his family and friends instead of reporting the incident to the police. By the time he took the child’s body to his house, his family had mobilized a tribal jirga and organized a “nanawati” or ritualized form of seeking forgiveness. It involves the sacrifice of goats and sheep at someone’s doorstep to seek forgiveness for a crime, mistake, or transgression.

“They accepted our apology and absolved us of murder,” he said. “God bless them, they were very nice people.”

Pashtun customary laws are unwritten codes and practices. Their essence is informed by Pashtunwali, a collection of ideal behaviors, codes, and aspirations, but their local practice is determined by precedents, ecology, history, and collective decisions within a tribal, clan, or region. Communities, particularly those in the Pashtun heartland straddling Pakistan and Afghanistan, follow “narkh” or local versions of Pashtun customary laws.

Kausar Zadran, a tribal leader in Paktia, often takes part in tribal councils arbitrating disputes in light of narkh. He says people prefer the Pashtun courts because resolutions are swifter.

“We decide more than 90 percent of our cases in the light of tribal traditions and laws,” he told Radio Free Afghanistan. “We take the rest to state courts because they somehow involve the government and the state [and cannot be solved within the local communities].”

Gulnawar Khan Zadran, another tribal leader in Paktia, says they resolved a land dispute in the village of Said Khel by invoking customary laws.

“Four of us intervened in the dispute after they had exhausted each other by engaging in a violent blood feud for years,” he told Radio Free Afghanistan. “We secured their agreement for arbitration and were able to resolve the dispute within a week.”

“We even got the local government administrator to back our arbitration,” he added. “We were able to solve a complex problem through customary laws.”

Javed Himat, a lawyer in Gardez, says invoking customary laws in criminal cases is illegal under the current Afghan legislation. He says the government courts are not corrupt, despite claims to the contrary.

“Obviously every court case will favor one party over the other or hold someone guilty while exonerating others,” he told Radio Free Afghanistan. “We have not seen any evidence of corruption in the courts.”

Himat acknowledges that most family issues and financial and land disputes across Paktia are still being resolved by informal tribal courts.

“The tribal councils have an important role in swiftly resolving disputes,” he noted. “They are more prevalent in remote regions outside the government control, but in regions controlled by the government people are increasingly turning to the judiciary and other state organs.”

Land Of The Jirgas

Grappling with mounting Taliban violence while fighting for its survival in the wake of a possible departure of U.S. and international troops this year, Kabul isn’t prioritizing justice at the state court level and has barely debated the issue.

Senior Afghan officials in Kabul and across greater Paktia have been known to romanticize the region’s tribal heritage by calling it the land of the jirgas. But activists and legal experts question whether the government is willing or able to establish the rule of law by overpowering tribal laws, some of which contradict the human rights protections guaranteed by the Afghan constitution.

Paktia Governor Mohammad Haleem Fidai, however, says gradual progress is being made and the government courts are slowly replacing the tribal councils in legal disputes.

“During the past one year we courts have resolved more than 1,100 cases,” he said. “Court cases take more time because all cases have to go through various tiers to ensure that justice is dispensed properly.”

For those in Paktia, however, it may be years if not decades before the Afghan courts gain the trust of residents and truly take over the role of dispensing justice.

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 Crime and Punishment, Ethnic Issues, Society | Tags: Greater Paktia, Khost, Paktia, Paktika, Pashtuns, Pashtunwali |

Rashid arrives in Karachi as he prepares for Pakistan Super League

16th February, 2021 · admin

Rashid Khan

Ariana: Rashid Khan, the ICC T20 player of the decade, arrived in Karachi on Monday to join Lahore Qalandars ahead of the start of this year’s Pakistan Super League (PSL). In an interview with Geo Sport, Rashid said he was very excited to be in Pakistan and that he hoped to be able to make his Pakistani fans proud. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Cricket, Rashid Khan |

Afghanistan: 22 New Reported Cases of COVID-19

16th February, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: The Ministry of Public Health on Tuesday reported 22 new positive cases of COVID-19 out of 1,022 samples tested in the last 24 hours. The ministry says the cumulative total of known COVID-19 cases is 55,520, the total number of reported deaths is 2,428, and the total number of recoveries is 48,514. Click here to read more (external link).

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

UN: 65 Journalists, Rights Workers Killed In Afghanistan Since 2018

15th February, 2021 · admin

By Radio Free Afghanistan
February 15, 2021

The United Nations said at least 65 journalists and human rights activists have been killed in Afghanistan in the past three years in a series of targeted killings.

The UN Assistance Mission for Afghanistan said in a report released on February 15 that the number includes 32 human rights defenders and 33 people working in the media.

The report, which tracked the killings from January 2018 to January 2021, comes with violence increasing as Taliban fighters step up their attacks on the government and other targets.

The report did not blame the Taliban specifically.

“At a time when dialogue and an end to the conflict through talks and political settlement should be the focus, the voices from human rights and the media need to be heard more than ever before; Instead they are being silenced,” said Deborah Lyons, the secretary-general’s special representative for Afghanistan.

The mission said the attacks on journalists and media workers have had a chilling effect, prompting many to either self-censor or quit their jobs. Some have even fled the country in the pursuit of safety for themselves and their families.

Among those targeted in recent years was Mohammad Ilyas Dayee, a reporter with RFE/RL’s Radio Free Afghanistan. He waskilled in southern Helmand Province in November when a bomb attached to his vehicle exploded.

The internationally backed Afghan government and Taliban militants are engaged in slow-moving peace talks aimed at ending the country’s decades-old war, but daily attacks have continued, often blamed on the Taliban.

The report noted that from the beginning of the intra-Afghan talks in September until last month, the number of targeted killings increased, with 11 media workers and right activists being killed.

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

More Security News

  • 4 People Killed, 4 Wounded by Violent Crime in Kabul Since Sunday
  • 11 Pashdan Dam Workers Abducted by Taliban in Herat
  • 7 Public Uprising Force Members Killed in Kunduz Taliban Attack
  • Five Policemen Killed in Zabul, Uruzgan Attacks
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Human Rights, Media, Security, Taliban, UN-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Afghan Journalists, Ashraf Ghani Government Security Failure |

Tolo News in Dari – February 15, 2021

15th February, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |
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