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Balkh Wins Title for Afghanistan Volleyball League

19th November, 2020 · admin

Tolo News: The Omul Bilad team from Balkh province won the title for the country’s first volleyball league by defeating Kabul’s Bala Hisar team 3-1 on Thursday.  Six teams from six zones of the country attended the competition. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Balkh, Volleyball |

A Horse Breeder Helps Preserve An Ancient Sport In Afghanistan

18th November, 2020 · admin

Buzkashi (file photo)

Alem Rahmanyar
Nilly Kohzad
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
November 18, 2020

SHEBERGHAN, Afghanistan — Abdul Rauf Amini, a horseman and breeder in northern Afghanistan, is the keeper of an ancient tradition.

He grooms horses to ride and compete in buzkashi, Afghanistan’s national sport that involves teams of horse riders fighting over a decapitated and disemboweled goat carcass. They jostle to grab the goat then maneuver around a large field while aiming to land it in a marked circle and win the game.

Amini, 50, has spent most of his adult life preparing horses for the dangerous and thrilling sport, where the sheer stamina and brute force of the horses and their riders are on display. The game has few rules and players run the risk of falling off and being trampled by horses.

This is why, being known as a chapandaz or expert horseman, a local term for buzkashi players, is a badge of honor and earns them considerable respect in the local community.

Inside his stable in Baba Ali, a village outside Sheberghan, the capital of northern Jawzjan Province, Amini is preparing his horses for the impending buzkashi season, which is scheduled to begin early next month.

“You have to look after them around the clock,” he told Radio Free Afghanistan. “We clean the horses’ faces with a soft piece of cloth. Every day we brush the horses with a special comb and clean their hooves,” he said of the meticulous care buzkashi horses require.

Special exercises such as horse walking and showering are necessary to maintain the animals for buzkashi, or goat-grabbing in Persian. Similar to well-groomed athletes, diet too is central to preparing the horses to compete in the tough games held in large fields ringed by snowcapped mountains.

Breeders such as Amini prepare a specific diet for each horse that consists of rye, straw, pasture grass, eggs, bundles of rice, and oils or fats. Such a diet can cost up to $700 per animal every month.

“I have been keenly interested in horse breeding and grooming since I was a child,” he said. “My late father always encouraged me, and I helped him look after the horses,” he added while reflecting on the techniques and knowledge he had acquired over three decades.

Amini says the horses that are groomed especially for buzkashi competitions, which typically involve two teams of a dozen riders, are expensive. “The price of local horses ranges from $2,000 to $30,000, but foreign horses cost anywhere from $50,000 to $100,000.”

In Jawzjan, different horse breeds produce different results. Ghorogh, Jirn, Samand, Meshki, and Sorkhoon all local horse breeds considered best for buzkashi because of their strength and grace.

But individual characteristics and performance ultimately decide their market value. “Most horses are currently imported from Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan because local horses here are smaller while the foreign ones are larger,” Amini said. “In Afghanistan currently there is a large market for foreign breeds.”

Buzkashi is played in many Central Asian nations, too, and is part of the nomadic heritage of many nations in the region. Its rules, however, vary from country to country and even among regions within one country.

Kabul has taken some steps toward promoting buzkashi. In March, the country’s first buzkashi league attracted thousands of spectators in Kabul. “It’s never been played on such a scale. I am very excited to see so many people here,” Haji Jawad Noori, a 28-year-old player with the Kabul team, told AFP at the time. “You have to be very fast and flexible. The carcass is also very heavy.”

In Jawzjan, officials hope to continue promoting the sport. “We are working on formalizing the winter season,” said Mohammad Siddiq Fayez, the provincial director of sports and physical education.

He says that in coordination with the National Buzkashi League, they are working on structuring the competitions, which are often held on Fridays or as part of folk festivals. “Buzkashi is our heritage and national treasure,” he told Radio Free Afghanistan.

In Kabul, officials see a bright future for the sport, which has drawn comparisons to Afghanistan’s tumultuous politics where strongmen have violently competed for power.

“We want to promote buzkashi,” said Ghani Modaqiq, an official at the state television network. “It’s our national sport, and we want to make it a globally recognized sport.”

Copyright (c) 2020. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Other Afghan Sports News

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Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Buzkashi, Cricket |

Dostum Asks for Permission to Lead Fight against Taliban

18th November, 2020 · admin · 10 Comments

Dostum

Tolo News: Marshal Abdul Rashid Dostum on Wednesday called on President Ashraf Ghani to grant him the permission to lead the fight against the Taliban, saying he will curb violence in the country and will repress those who will try to wage war. Dostum said he is awaiting direction from the government, stating that he will prove that he is a real marshal by defeating the Taliban.  Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Security, Taliban | Tags: Ashraf Ghani, Dostum |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – November 18, 2020

18th November, 2020 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Film Industry Has Been Ignored for Many Years: Actors

18th November, 2020 · admin

Tolo News: As the Herat International Women’s Film Festival gets underway, a number of actors on Wednesday said the film industry in the country has been ignored by the government over the last two decades and its crucial role to influence society has not been recognized so far. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Art and Culture, Economic News, Entertainment News, Society | Tags: Herat |

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

18th November, 2020 · admin

Tolo News: The Ministry of Public Health on Sunday reported 243 new positive cases of COVID-19 out of 1,201 samples tested in the last 24 hours. The data by the ministry shows that the cumulative number of total cases is now 43,924, the number of total reported deaths is 1,645, and the total number of recoveries is 35,295. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Afghanistan facing second wave of Coronavirus: Osmani
  • 20 percent of Afghans to receive coronavirus vaccine by 2021 end: official
Posted in Health News | Tags: Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Afghanistan, Vaccination |

Pakistan PM To Visit Afghanistan For First Time On November 19

18th November, 2020 · admin · 1 Comment

Imran Khan

Radio Mashaal
November 18, 2020

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan will embark on a one-day visit to neighboring Afghanistan on November 19, his first visit to Kabul since becoming prime minister in August 2018.

Pakistan’s Foreign Office said in a statement on November 18 that Khan is making the trip at the invitation of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.

Besides holding talks with Ghani, Khan will discuss trade, the Afghan peace process, and regional economic development and connectivity with Afghan authorities.

Khan and Ghani met on the sidelines of the 14th Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit in Saudi Arabia in May last year, and Ghani visited Pakistan a month later.

A Transit-Trade Agreement signed between Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2010 calls for the facilitation in the movement of goods between the two countries.

Pakistan’s Foreign Office statement said that ahead of the visit, Khan’s trade adviser Razaq Dawood traveled to Kabul on November 16-18 and held “in-depth” discussions on bilateral trade and investment ties with Afghan officials.

Copyright (c) 2020. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • Afghan, Pakistani Officials Discuss Key Trade Agreement in Kabul
Posted in Economic News, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Ashraf Ghani, Imran Khan |

Al-Qaida ‘On the Ropes’ After 2 Decades of War

18th November, 2020 · admin · 7 Comments

Al Qaeda leader, Ayman al-Zawahri

By Jeff Seldin
VOA News
November 17, 2020

WASHINGTON – Key U.S. officials are not backing down from their assessment that core al-Qaida, while still a threat, is in decline, brushing aside intelligence suggesting the terror organization remains entrenched in Afghanistan and may be growing stronger.

For months, tensions have been growing between the United States and its allies over the status of al-Qaida, with some counterterrorism officials arguing Washington is in danger of underestimating the threat posed by the terror group.

But the State Department’s top counterterrorism official on Tuesday said al-Qaida has been significantly degraded as a result of U.S. efforts.

“I think al-Qaida’s on the ropes, no doubt,” Counterterrorism Coordinator Ambassador Nathan Sales told the virtual Global Security Forum in a pre-recorded interview.

“We have decimated their senior leadership cadre over the past 20 years leaving core al-Qaida leadership really a remnant of its former self,” he said.

Sales’ comments come just a day after U.S. national security adviser Robert O’Brien similarly downplayed al-Qaida core’s capacity to do harm.

“Al-Qaida’s been incapable of directing a complex, large-scale attack against the U.S. because of the pressure that we’ve kept on them,” he said. “And there’s more to come.”

Just how big of a blow al-Qaida’s leadership has suffered of late, though, remains a question.

Neither Sales nor O’Brien addressed recent rumors that al-Qaida’s long-time leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, may have finally succumbed to illness. Nor did they speak to the alleged assassination of Zawahiri’s likely successor, Abu Muhammad al-Masri, in an Israeli operation this past August in Tehran, as first reported by The New York Times.

But Sales argued no matter who might be in charge, their influence has waned.

“There’s a sense in which the question of who leads al-Qaida core matters is a little bit less today than it did a decade ago, certainly two decades ago,” he told the virtual forum.

“What we have seen is a sort of devolution of authority from al-Qaida core to the branches and affiliates,” Sales said. “Those branches, I think, have an increasing amount of organizational autonomy to develop attack plans to set strategic objectives.”

Contrasting assessments 

But international counterterrorism officials and Afghanistan’s own security officials argue their intelligence suggests al-Qaida core remains relevant and has been growing stronger.

“Senior figures remain in Afghanistan, as well as hundreds of armed operatives,” Edmund Fitton-Brown, coordinator of the United Nations monitoring team for Islamic State, al-Qaida and the Taliban, warned in a webinar last month.

Recent U.N. reports, based on member state intelligence, also warn that the group’s core leadership appears to be assembling a growing cadre of fighters, perhaps as many as 600, while operating in 12 Afghan provinces.

Such remarks stand in stark contrast to statements by key U.S. officials, which put the number of fighters available to al-Qaida’s core leadership at as little as “a few dozen fighters who are primarily focused on their survival.”

The pushback against such rosy assessments, however, is not just coming from U.S. allies and countries with interests in the region.

Afghan Taliban & al-Qaida ties 

A new report on Afghanistan from the Defense Department’s inspector general, released Tuesday, also raised questions about al-Qaida’s staying power, citing Washington’s reliance on the Taliban to sever all ties with the terror group.

“It is unclear at this point whether the Taliban is upholding its commitments,” Acting Inspector General Sean O’Donnell wrote, adding, “it is difficult to discern the extent to which it is meeting the requirement that Afghanistan not serve as a haven for terrorists who threaten the United States.”

The report also noted that al-Qaida leadership has generally welcomed February’s deal between the U.S. and the Taliban.

“It does not require the Taliban to publicly renounce al-Qaida and the deal includes a timeline for the United States and coalition forces to withdraw — accomplishing one of al-Qaida’s main goals,” the report noted.

But Sales, who spoke prior to the report’s release, said the terms of the deal signed this past February, “are perfectly clear.”

“We are going to be watching very closely to verify,” he said. “We expect them to live up to their obligations.”

Al-Qaida affiliates in Africa 

In the meantime, Sales said the U.S. intends to focus on what it sees as the more pressing danger from al-Qaida’s network of affiliates in Africa, including al-Shabab, Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM), and al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQOM).

“These groups are continuing to fight with a fair degree of operational autonomy, without getting the message that al-Qaida has been eviscerated,” he said, calling the U.S. effort to degrade and defeat al-Shabab “a top priority.”

Concerns about the reach of al-Shabab have grown considerably over the past year, escalating sharply after a deadly attack this past January on the Manda Bay Airfield in Kenya, which caught U.S. forces unprepared.

There has also been concern that al-Shabab may be interested in the idea of carrying out attacks on the U.S. and the West, with a 2019 arrest in the Philippines that indicated links between the group and possible attacks using airliners.

As part of its ongoing campaign against al-Shabab, the U.S. has relied heavily on drone strikes targeting senior leaders.

But the U.S. is also ramping up efforts on other fronts.

The State Department Tuesday named two senior al-Shabab officials – explosives expert and media chief Abdullahi Osman Mohamed and Jaysh Ayman unit commander Maalim Ayman – as Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGTs).

Sales, briefing reporters after the announcement, described al-Shabab as “one of the most dangerous and capable al-Qaida affiliates in the world” and said the designations will take a toll on the group’s finances.

“It makes it that much harder for designated individuals or organizations, to try and move money through the international financial system,” he said.

“We’re bringing all of our tools to this fight,” the State Department official added. “Not just sanctions, but also information sharing, counter messaging, combating travel and building partner capacity to protect soft targets.”

A United Nations report issued last month found al-Shabab has an operating budget of at least $21 million in 2019 and managed to raise at least $13 million from just four sources during a nine-month period ending this past August.

Posted in Al-Qaeda, Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Afghan Officials Downplay US Troop Reduction Reports

17th November, 2020 · admin · 5 Comments

By Ayaz Gul
VOA News
November 17, 2020

ISLAMABAD – Top government officials in Afghanistan are downplaying reports the United States may be planning to withdraw U.S. troops, saying local forces are independently conducting almost all security operations across the country and rely only on a small aerial support from foreign partners.

U.S. media reports say President Donald Trump intends to reduce the number of American troops in Afghanistan to 2,500 from the existing 4,500.  VOA has been unable to confirm the reports and there has been, so far, no official announcement of a U.S. troop drawdown.

On Tuesday, Afghan Defense Minister Asadullah Khalid, while addressing the parliament, attempted to ease growing domestic concerns that an abrupt foreign troop withdrawal from the country would undermine his government’s ability to battle Taliban insurgents.

Khalid noted that currently Afghan security forces carry out 96% of operations against the Taliban on their own and receive four percent aerial support from foreign partners.

The defense minister, however, insisted he did not foresee a complete departure of international forces from Afghanistan.

Speculation about a possible U.S. troop cutback comes as peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban have stalled and battlefield violence across the turmoil-hit country have intensified, killing dozens of combatants and non-combatants every day.

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has cautioned Trump against abruptly pulling out of Afghanistan.

“A rapid withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan now would hurt our allies and delight the people who wish us harm. Violence affecting Afghans is still rampant. The Taliban is not abiding by the conditions of the so-called peace deal,” McConnell said in a statement.

He was referring to a peace-building agreement the Trump administration signed with the Taliban in February that requires all U.S. and NATO troops to leave Afghanistan by May 2021. In return, the insurgents are bound to fight terrorism on Afghan soil and negotiate a permanent cease-fire as well as political reconciliation with rival Afghan factions.

“We’d be abandoning our partners in Afghanistan, the brave Afghans who are fighting the terrorists and destroying the government’s leverage in their talks with the Taliban to end the fighting,” McConnell warned.

“Our retreat would embolden the Taliban, especially the deadly Haqqani wing, and risk plunging Afghan women and girls back into what they experienced in the 1990s,” said the U.S. senator while referring to the former Taliban regime in Kabul when women were barred from outdoor activities and girls were not allowed to receive education.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also warned Tuesday the military alliance could pay a heavy price for leaving Afghanistan “too soon or in an uncoordinated way”. NATO has under 12,000 troops in the war-ravaged country, nearly half of them Americans.

Related

  • Price for Leaving Afghanistan Too Soon Could be ‘Very High’: NATO
  • Afghan acting defense minister ‘not sure’ if peace talks will yield result
  • They grew up under U.S. occupation. What happens when the troops leave?
  • German defense leaders have ‘feelers out’ on sudden US withdrawal from Afghanistan
Posted in Haqqani Network, NATO-Afghanistan, Peace Talks, Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Assadullah Khalid |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – November 17, 2020

17th November, 2020 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |
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