Ariana: Attack Energy thrashed Jawanan Wahedi 7-0 in the 33rd match of Afghanistan Champions League (ACL) in Kabul on Monday. In the 34th match on the same day, Aino Mina edged Khadim 3-1. In Tuesday’s matches, Khurasan Faryab lock horns with Istiqlal Kabul, while Sarsabz Yashlar face Sorkh Poshan Khafi. The matches are broadcast live on Ariana Television. Click here to read more (external link).
Taliban Detains 14 Civilians Amid Tensions in Sar-e-Pul’s Balkhab District
Afghanistan International: Reliable sources from Balkhab district in Sar-e-Pul province, reported to Afghanistan International that the Taliban officials have detained and tortured at least 14 local residents. The families of these detainees have not been allowed to visit them for weeks. According to local sources, several operatives of the Taliban’s intelligence department, masquerading as mining contractors, have attempted to coerce locals into denouncing the Taliban’s oppressive measures. When some residents voiced complaints about discriminatory practices by the Taliban and expressed sympathy towards resistance movements, they were reportedly recorded by Taliban spies. Click here to read more (external link).
Tolo News in Dari – May 6, 2024
Abu Muslim humiliate Maiwand with 9-1 win; Sohrab Afghan scores 5 goals
Ariana: Abu Muslim hammered Maiwand 9-1 in the third season of Afghanistan Champions League (ACL) in Kabul on Sunday, with Mohammad Sohrab Afghan alone scoring five goals. In the earlier match of the day, Adalat Farah defeated Mawj Sahil 3-0, with Abdul Ali Wahedi scoring two goals and Farhad Karimi scoring one. Monday’s ACL matches will see Attack Energy take on Jawanan Wahedi at 1 PM and Aino Mina face Khadim at 3:30 PM. The matches are broadcast live on Ariana Television. Click here to read more (external link).
Other Afghan Sports News
Russia Inches Toward Marriage Of Convenience With Taliban In Terror Fight
Michael Scollon
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
May 5, 2024
Shortly after the Taliban seized power, Russia addressed the question of whether it was time to review the militant group’s status as a terrorist organization.
“It is very important to see what the Taliban’s first steps in governing Afghanistan will be like,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on August 30, 2021. “Conclusions can be formed after this.”
Two and a half years later — despite the Taliban’s failure to deliver on its promises to form an inclusive government, adhere to basic human rights norms, and prevent Afghan territory from becoming a safe haven for transnational extremist groups — a mutual enemy appears to be forcing a decision.
Since a deadly terrorist attack claimed by the Islamic State (IS) extremist group near Moscow on March 22, Russia has increasingly talked up its relationship with the Taliban, which is battling the Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K) offshoot in Afghanistan that is believed to have carried out the attack.
While the Taliban’s government is globally unrecognized, Peskov said last month that Moscow has to resolve “pressing issues” that demand increased dialogue with the militant group, whose leaders are “actually the ones in power in Afghanistan.”
Considering the importance Russia places on Afghanistan in maintaining regional security in the face of a rising IS-K threat, boosting engagement with the Taliban holds benefits for Moscow, observers say.
Alec Bertina of Militant Wire, a research outlet that tracks militant groups, says that Russia removing the Taliban from its terror blacklist could be the beginning of a “marriage of convenience.”
“As much as it’s kind of an amusing idea for Russia and the Taliban to get cozy, it’s in their security interest to do so right now,” Bertina said. “Given the mutual security threat, and that the Taliban can be used basically to take the hits and casualties that come with fighting IS, it’s sort of a no-brainer.”
When it emerged in Afghanistan a decade ago, IS-K staged attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Its targets included Western forces in Afghanistan as well as the Taliban, which opposed the former Afghan government and vied with IS-K for influence among the dozens of extremist groups active in the country.
Since the Taliban took over, IS-K has maintained pressure on the Taliban, whose rule it rejects, and has worked to “make life as difficult as possible” for its de facto government, said Michael Kugelman, director of the South Asia Institute at the Wilson Center in Washington.
Its attacks against the Taliban, religious minorities, and foreign targets in Afghanistan were designed to “undermine the Taliban’s legitimacy in order to convince the Afghan people that the Taliban is unable to provide peace and security in the country,” Kugelman told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi.
IS-K has also openly challenged its rival in a sophisticated propaganda campaign, mocking the Taliban government’s desire to be recognized by the international community and accusing it of adhering to an “ignorant” brand of Islam.
The group has also increasingly expanded its reach further abroad, including with deadly attacks in Iran, Russia, and Central Asia, a major recruiting ground for IS-K fighters.
“Its main bases are still in Afghanistan, most of its attacks are in Afghanistan, but this is a regional affiliate of Islamic State that has increasingly global goals,” Kugelman said of IS-K.
As evidenced by the recent attack on a concert venue that killed more than 140 people and injured hundreds more — the deadliest terrorist attack on Russian soil in two decades — Moscow has reason to treat the IS-K with urgency and to forge greater cooperation with one of the group’s main adversaries.
“Russian outreach and concessions to the Taliban are likely meant, at least in part, to signal Moscow’s confidence in the Taliban’s ability to degrade the IS-K threat,” Kugelman told RFE/RL in written comments.
The Taliban was designated as a terrorist organization by Russia in 2003, two years after it was pushed from power by U.S.-led forces.
After returning to power, the Taliban initially dismissed the IS-K threat and has insisted that the group is not active on Afghan soil, even as it consistently developed its capabilities to confront the group and destroyed IS-K cells.
Most recently, in April, the Taliban reportedly ordered the creation of a special military unit to fight the IS-K.
But “whatever the Taliban has done against IS-K, it hasn’t stopped IS-K from being able to conduct external operations in other countries,” Bertina said, noting that it has proved incapable of preventing IS-K’s recruitment efforts.
That, Bertina said, has led Russia and other countries to discuss “whether it may be of interest to help [the Taliban] out a little bit in their fight.”
Moscow’s de-listing of the Taliban from its terror blacklist, Bertina said, could pave the way for Russia to potentially “start giving the Taliban resources to better fight IS-K.”
Bertina says he envisions a situation in which the Taliban would bear the brunt of the fighting on the ground in Afghanistan, with Russia providing intelligence. Russia would be unlikely to “be too vocal” about direct raids on IS-K in Afghanistan, “considering the uncomfortable history Russia has regarding counterterrorism operations when it comes to countries like Afghanistan.”
Kugelman also sees value in Russia cooperating with the Taliban on the counterterrorism front, citing the Taliban’s “willingness and capacity to carry out scorched-earth ground campaigns against IS-K.”
Russia, while bogged down in its war against Ukraine, could potentially offer the Taliban “arms, money, and even training and advising to help the Taliban do more damage against the IS-K,” Kugelman said.
Copyright (c) 2024. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
3 Taliban Members Killed in Herat, Claims NRF
Afghanistan International: The National Resistance Front (NRF) reported a successful assault on a Taliban checkpoint in the Shindand district of Herat province on Saturday evening, resulting in the deaths of three Taliban members.The NRF confirmed that their forces suffered no casualties during the operation. Click here to read more (external link).
Tolo News in Dari – May 5, 2024
Taliban face rare public uprising against their rule in northeastern Afghanistan
Ayaz Gul
VOA News
May 5, 2024
ISLAMABAD — Afghanistan’s hardline Taliban leaders have threatened to militarily suppress unprecedented violent public protests in a northeastern border region against a nationwide ban on poppy cultivation.
The unrest erupted last Friday when the Taliban’s anti-narcotics forces began destroying poppy fields in Badakhshan province, prompting angry farmers to resist it with the support of local residents.
Multiple sources confirmed Sunday that Taliban security forces used firearms to disperse the demonstrators, killing two of them during the two days of protests.
Videos circulating on social media showed residents chanting slogans against reclusive Taliban supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada, who has banned poppy cultivation across Afghanistan through a religious decree. VOA could not ascertain the authenticity of the footage independently.
While Taliban authorities claimed Sunday the situation had returned to normal, residents said tensions were running high, and they were waiting for a high-powered government team to address their complaints.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in an overnight official announcement that their army chief, Qari Fasihuddin, a Badakhshan native, would lead the team to thoroughly investigate the violence and circumstances leading to it.
Mujahid said that an anti-poppy campaign in Badakhshan was under way in line with Akhundzada’s decree to prevent the cultivation of the illegal crop and its smuggling.
“This decree extends to all regions without exception. Regrettably, there have been incidents where offenders attempted to attack the security forces involved in the fight against poppy cultivation, resulting in tragic events,” he said.
Fasihuddin reportedly warned on Sunday that he would be compelled to deploy additional military forces to “quell the rebellion” if the demonstrations persist. He reiterated the Taliban’s resolve to eradicate poppy cultivation in Afghanistan and vowed to achieve this goal, come what may.
Badakhshan and surrounding Afghan provinces are ethnically non-Pashtun regions. The province borders Tajikistan and Pakistan.
The Taliban, who represent the country’s majority Pashtun population, were unable to take control of these provinces during their first stint in power in the 1990s.
Following their takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, the Taliban have successfully established control over all 34 Afghan provinces.
However, some experts argue that the public uprising in Badakhshan highlights the potential obstacles that the Taliban may face in maintaining their authority.
The international community has not yet formally recognized the Taliban government, citing its restrictions on Afghan women’s access to education and work, among other human rights concerns.
Afghanistan has faced dire economic problems since the Taliban takeover nearly three years ago. The Afghan banking sector largely remains isolated, and terrorism-related sanctions on Taliban leaders continue to deter donors from resuming financial assistance for development programs.
The restrictions have fueled unemployment and economic problems for the poverty-stricken country’s estimated 40 million population.
The World Bank noted in its latest report released on Thursday that the Taliban’s ban on opium cultivation precipitated a staggering $1.3 billion loss in farmers’ incomes.
Citing U.N. estimates, the report said that the opiate economy’s value has contracted by 90 percent, while the area under cultivation declined by 95 percent, costing Afghans 450,000 jobs at the farm level alone.
The World Bank report noted that Afghanistan’s economic outlook remains uncertain, with the threat of stagnation looming large until at least 2025. “For a sustainable future, Afghanistan needs to address harmful gender policies, invest in health and education, and focus on the comparative advantages it has in the agricultural and extractive sectors,” it said.
Afghanistan used to be the world’s largest opium-poppy producer until the Taliban imposed the ban on cultivation in early 2022.
The ban strictly prohibits the cultivation, production, usage, transportation, trade, export, and import of all illicit drugs in Afghanistan. Afghan poppy farming accounted for 85% of global opium production until recently, according to United Nations estimates.
Related
Protests enter second day in Darayim, Badakhshan, Afghanistan
Khaama: People protests in Badakhshan’s Darayim district entered their second day on Saturday, May 4th. Residents claim the Taliban took five community leaders under the pretext of discussing protesters’ demands, but their fate remains unknown. Residents express concern over the detention of these five community leaders. Anti-Taliban protests in Darayim, Badakhshan, began on Friday, May 3rd; according to Badakhshan residents, after initial protests, Taliban members resorted to shooting at the people to suppress them, resulting in at least one fatality. Click here to read more (external link).
Related
Taliban’s Deceptive Slogan of Security Assurance

Taliban militants (file photo)
8am: The claim of providing security has long been a tool in the hands of the Taliban, extending from the distant past to the present. By exploiting this notion and portraying themselves as worthy rulers, this group has also deceived some countries. However, the realities on the ground over the past nearly three years show something different: the Taliban have failed to ensure security. The fact is that Afghanistan under Taliban rule has not only lacked security but has also been engulfed in a whirlpool of insecurity. Nevertheless, Taliban officials, in meetings with foreign officials or participation in public gatherings, portray their regime as the guardian and guarantor of security in the country. Click here to read more (external link).
Related
