logo

Daily Updated Afghan News Service

  • Home
  • About
  • Opinion
  • Links to More News
  • Good Afghan News
  • Poll Results
  • Learn about Islam
  • Learn Dari (Afghan Persian/Farsi)

Recent Posts

  • Flood death toll in Afghanistan rises to 51 April 2, 2026
  • Kandahari Hat: From Style Choice to Forced Attire in Kabul April 2, 2026
  • UN review finds Taliban policies violate women’s rights convention April 2, 2026
  • Bennett Reports 471 Civilian Casualties from Unexploded Ordnance in Afghanistan Last Year April 2, 2026
  • Senior Officials Sent To China For Talks With Taliban, Says Pakistan April 2, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 2, 2026 April 2, 2026
  • 19 Afghan migrants killed as boat capsizes off Turkish coast April 2, 2026
  • Afghanistan falls 5–1 to Syria in Asian Cup qualifier April 2, 2026
  • Floods, rainfall kill 48 in Afghanistan over past week, ANDMA says April 1, 2026
  • US eases asylum freeze for vetted migrants, keeps Afghanistan ban April 1, 2026

Categories

  • Afghan Children
  • Afghan Sports News
  • Afghan Women
  • Afghanistan Freedom Front
  • Al-Qaeda
  • Anti-Government Militants
  • Anti-Taliban Resistance
  • AOP Reports
  • Arab-Afghan Relations
  • Art and Culture
  • Australia-Afghanistan Relations
  • Book Review
  • Britain-Afghanistan Relations
  • Canada-Afghanistan Relations
  • Censorship
  • Central Asia
  • China-Afghanistan Relations
  • Civilian Injuries and Deaths
  • Corruption
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Drone warfare
  • Drugs
  • Economic News
  • Education
  • Elections News
  • Entertainment News
  • Environmental News
  • Ethnic Issues
  • EU-Afghanistan Relations
  • Everyday Life
  • France-Afghanistan Relations
  • Germany-Afghanistan Relations
  • Haqqani Network
  • Health News
  • Heroism
  • History
  • Human Rights
  • India-Afghanistan Relations
  • Interviews
  • Iran-Afghanistan Relations
  • ISIS/DAESH
  • Islamophobia News
  • Japan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Landmines
  • Media
  • Misc.
  • Muslims and Islam
  • NATO-Afghanistan
  • News in Dari (Persian/Farsi)
  • NRF – National Resistance Front
  • Opinion/Editorial
  • Other News
  • Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Peace Talks
  • Photos
  • Political News
  • Reconstruction and Development
  • Refugees and Migrants
  • Russia-Afghanistan Relations
  • Science and Technology
  • Security
  • Society
  • Tajikistan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Taliban
  • Traffic accidents
  • Travel
  • Turkey-Afghanistan Relations
  • UN-Afghanistan Relations
  • Uncategorized
  • US-Afghanistan Relations
  • Uzbekistan-Afghanistan Relations

Archives

Dari/Pashto Services

  • Bakhtar News Agency
  • BBC Pashto
  • BBC Persian
  • DW Dari
  • DW Pashto
  • VOA Dari
  • VOA Pashto

Tolo News in Dari – April 1, 2024

1st April, 2024 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Gunfire from Taliban Guards Injures Six Civilians in Helmand: Local Reports

1st April, 2024 · admin

8am: Reports indicate that the Taliban guards opened fire on civilians who were attempting to prevent the destruction of a wheat silo. Allegedly, the silo was being demolished to facilitate the widening of the Kandahar-Herat highway. This incident follows yesterday’s occurrence in Paktia, where four civilians were also wounded due to Taliban gunfire targeting civilians. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Taliban | Tags: Helmand, Life under Taliban rule, Paktia |

CNN: ‘Taliban’s Pashto chauvinism helps ISIS-K’ recruitment from other ethnic groups

1st April, 2024 · admin

Khaama: Edmund Fitton-Brown, a senior adviser to the New York-based Counter Extremism Project, told CNN that ISIS-K “has the desire and a growing ability to project beyond Afghanistan and carry out regional attacks” in Pakistan, Iran and Central Asia, bolstered by a robust media output in Tajik, Uzbek and Russian. Fitton-Brown said that in Afghanistan, the Taliban’s “Pashto chauvinism has helped ISIS-K recruit from other Afghan ethnic groups.” CNN, citing a senior advisor to the new-York-based extremism project, said that the Taliban’s Pashtun extremist nationalism has facilitated the recruitment of other Afghan ethnic groups into ISIS Khorasan. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, ISIS/DAESH, Taliban | Tags: Pashtun dominated Taliban government, Pashtunization, Taliban government failure, Taliban Security Failure |

Surge in Taliban Abductions: Girls and Ex-Soldiers Targeted

31st March, 2024 · admin

Taliban militant (file photo)

8am: Taliban continued their arbitrary arrests of women activists, former military personnel, journalists, and social media activists over the past week. Three protesting girls, who are sisters, and their brother were detained in Kabul. Meanwhile, members of this group forcibly took an underage girl from her home in Pasaband district, Ghor province, and married her off to a Taliban member. Simultaneously, several former military personnel were arbitrarily detained in Kabul and Panjshir provinces and transferred to undisclosed locations. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Abduction, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban Amnesty Violation, Taliban Crime, Taliban war on women |

Turkish police announce detention of 40 Afghan asylum seekers

31st March, 2024 · admin

Khaama: The Turkish police have announced that 40 Afghan asylum seekers were detained during an inspection of cargo trucks in the city of Amasya. Turkish media reported on Saturday, March 30th, that these refugees had concealed themselves in a food-carrying truck travelling from the city of Ağrı to Istanbul. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Continued forced deportation of Afghan migrants from Iran
Posted in Iran-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants, Turkey-Afghanistan Relations |

Afghan fighter Mubariz beats his French opponent

31st March, 2024 · admin

Baz Mohammad Mubariz

Ariana: Afghan MMA fighter Baz Mohammad Mubariz defeated his French opponent by unanimous decision. The fight between Mubariz and his French fighter, Johan Van de Hel, took place in Thailand. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Afghan MMA, Mubariz |

Tolo News in Dari – March 31, 2024

31st March, 2024 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Confirm 2 Americans Among Foreign Detainees in Afghanistan

31st March, 2024 · admin

Zabihullah Mujahid

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
March 31, 2024

ISLAMABAD — The Taliban government in Afghanistan confirmed Sunday that they had detained “a number of foreign citizens, including two Americans” for allegedly violating their laws.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the chief Taliban spokesperson, told the state-run Afghan radio they had informed the United States about the detention of its citizens. He did not provide any additional details, nor did he reveal the nationalities of the other foreign detainees.

Relatives and U.S. officials have identified one of the Americans in custody as Ryan Corbett, while the identity of the second person was not disclosed.

“Two Americans are currently imprisoned along with other foreign nationals. The reasons for their visit are not clear, but whatever the reasons, anyone who visits Afghanistan must abide by its laws. Anyone obtaining an Afghan visa agrees to follow our laws,” Mujahid said while talking separately to the privately run local TOLO news channel.

This is the first time the Taliban has publicly acknowledged the detention of two American nationals. So far, they had only reported the arrest of Corbett.

He was taken into custody in August 2022, a year after the Islamist group regained power in Afghanistan following the withdrawal of U.S.-led Western troops after nearly 20 years of war with the then-insurgent Taliban.

Corbett’s family has lately stepped-up calls for President Joe Biden’s administration to do more to secure his safe and early release.

According to CNN, Corbett was able to call his wife Anna and their three children last week for the fifth time since his detention.

“It was a disturbing call,” Anna Corbett told the U.S. media outlet Thursday. “It was hard to hear Ryan losing hope. He’s been held now almost 600 days and he had a change in his mindset about it,” she told the U.S. news network.

Anna said that Corbett’s physical health had been deteriorating, “and now that his mental health is going down, it’s just super scary for the kids and I.”

The U.S. State Department spokesperson said Thursday that it was working to secure the release of all American citizens “wrongfully detained” abroad.

Mathew Miller told reporters he “cannot imagine the pain” the families were “going through, and the grief that they’re suffering, and how difficult it must be knowing that their loved one is going through such a tragic hardship.”

He said that U.S. officials in meetings with Taliban representatives had “continually pressed” them to release all American detainees immediately and unconditionally.

“We have made clear to the Taliban that these detentions are a significant obstacle to positive engagement, and we will continue to do that. We are using every lever we can to try to bring Ryan and these other wrongfully detained Americans home from Afghanistan,” he added.

Corbett and his family had lived in Afghanistan for years before being evacuated during the August 2021 Taliban takeover. He ran and supervised humanitarian projects for nongovernmental organizations, focusing on health and education.

Corbett returned to Afghanistan twice in 2022 and was detained by the Taliban on his second trip but has not been charged with any crimes, according to his family.

“The Biden administration has done little to secure Ryan’s release despite continued reports of his deteriorating health while held in deplorable conditions,” U.S. Representative Michael McCaul, the House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman, said in a March 27 statement.

Posted in Crime and Punishment, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: prisoner |

More Than Just Islamic State: Rising Militancy in Afghanistan and Pakistan

30th March, 2024 · admin

Nafees Takar
VOA News
March 30, 2024

WASHINGTON — There has been a wave of attacks across Pakistan in recent weeks by militant groups operating in the region that have widely varying objectives.

This week, a suicide attacker killed five Chinese nationals and their Pakistani driver in a convoy in Pakistan’s northwest. Pakistani Taliban, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, is the usual suspect for such attacks in the northwest, but in a statement on Wednesday, it denied being behind targeting the Chinese workers.

Earlier, two suicide attacks in Pakistan’s restive Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province killed nine Pakistani troops in the third week of March.

In the southwest, militants carried out a brazen attack on Pakistan’s second-largest naval airbase and a port complex near the Arabian Sea in the volatile Balochistan province. The Pakistan army said two soldiers and 14 militants were killed in the attacks. Designated terrorist group Baloch Liberation Army, or BLA, accepted the responsibility.

The attacks by suspected regional militant groups came as the most active terrorist group in the region, Islamic State-Khorasan, was blamed by Washington for the attack in Moscow a week ago that killed more than 140 concert-goers.

“The recent surge in attacks is deeply concerning because it represents an escalation in militant tactics,” said Elizabeth Threlkeld, senior fellow and director for South Asian affairs at the Washington-based Stimson Center.

Who are the militant groups now active in the region, and what are their goals?

Islamic State-Khorasan, or IS-K, is leading the current wave of terror across the region.

The group was formed in 2015 by disgruntled Pakistani Taliban members. It considers itself a branch of the larger Islamic State, or IS, in what it calls the Khorasan, a reference to the historic region comprising parts of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Iran.

IS-K, like its parent organization IS, is a Sunni organization. IS-K claims it is working to enforce Salafi sharia throughout its region of influence. The group opposes Shia Islam, and fighters have taken credit for hundreds of deaths of Shiites in Pakistan and Afghanistan in recent years.

A U.N. report last year in June said IS-K’s family members and fighters in the region number between 4,000 and 6,000.

“IS-K is attracting disgruntled militants from Taliban and members of the Tajikistan-based radical group Jama’at Ansarullah, Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, East Turkistan Islamic Movement and those inspired by the Salafi ideology,” said Syed Fakhar Kakakhel, a Pashtun journalist in Pakistan who covers militancy in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

IS-K has not claimed responsibility for the attack in Moscow, but its statement in Pashto last Monday glorified the attackers. The 30-page statement was a fierce polemic against the ruling Taliban in Afghanistan, scolding them for their relations with the U.S., Russia, China and other countries.

IS-K has claimed responsibility, though, for two recent suicide attacks, one each in Afghanistan’s Kandahar city on March 21 and the suicide bombings on January 3 at the memorial services for the Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani in Kerman city, Iran. More than 100 people were killed in the latter attack. Soleimani was killed in a U.S. drone attack in Iraq in 2020.

Russian, Iranian and Afghan Taliban identified the attackers of Moscow, Kerman and Kandahar as nationals of Tajikistan.

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan: umbrella syndicate of militants

Analysts say TTP has gotten smarter in its tactics, techniques, and weapons since the withdrawal of U.S.-led NATO forces from Afghanistan in August 2021. A U.N. report early this year said al-Qaida is conducting suicide bomber training to support TTP, a U.S.-designated terrorist group.

Kakakhel said TTP’s new strategy includes delegating powers to its proxies, adding sophisticated weapons such as M24 sniper rifles and M16A4 rifles with thermal scopes and night vision, along with targeted ambushes to its playbook.

“We had reported suicide attacks where a candidate came to press the button and blew himself off. But now, they fight for the last breath inflicting maximum casualties to forces and then pressing the button at the right time,” Kakakhel said.

“I assess the TTP’s threat to be more severe, especially as the TTP has sanctuary in Afghanistan and support of the Taliban. TTP also has a bigger fighting force,” said Asfandyar Mir, senior expert for South Asia with a focus on Afghanistan and Pakistan, at the Washington-based U.S. Institute for Peace.

The militants carried out 97 attacks in February this year and about 789 attacks last year in Pakistan alone, the highest since 2018, according to Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies. Pakistani officials attribute a higher percentage of the attacks to the TTP or its proxies.

The Pakistan military and civilian government representatives engaged the TTP leadership in talks in 2021, but they couldn’t reach a deal. The government officials later said TTP wanted power in regions close to Afghanistan to impose their Sharia on the style of Afghan Taliban.

“Pakistani security forces should be commended for holding off attacks on Gwadar and Turbat naval station, but the broader challenge remains that the military and police are taking heavy losses across the western border region,” Elizabeth Threlkeld told VOA.

She said Pakistan’s leaders badly miscalculated in assuming a Taliban government in Kabul would support Pakistan’s interests. “As Pakistan seeks a way out of this difficult diplomatic and security challenge, it would benefit from conducting a thorough review of the analysis and decision-making that drove its Afghan policy for the past two decades to draw lessons going forward,” she said.

Balochistan: home for militant separatist groups

Baloch separatist groups, several of which are designated as terrorist groups by Britain and the United States, are largely secular but for nearly 20 years have been embroiled in an active insurgency against Pakistani troops. The feud started after the Pakistani army killed a prominent Baloch leader and former chief minister, Balochistan Akbar Bugti, in 2006.

As many as five known Baloch separatist groups are coordinating their attacks against Chinese-funded projects and Pakistani forces in the restive province under the banner of the “Baloch Raji Aajoi Sangar,” a Baloch name translated as Baloch National Freedom Movement.

The most lethal faction is the Majeed Brigade, a sub-group of the Baloch Liberation Army. The Majeed Brigade has accepted responsibilities for some of the lethal attacks on the Chinese nationals and Pakistani troops. Other Baloch separatist groups engaged in insurgency include Baloch Republican Army, Baloch Republican Guards, Baloch Liberation Front and Bashirzeb Baloch Group.

Balochistan-based analyst Syed Ali Shah said Baloch militants are different from Islamic militants: “In Balochistan, this is a political insurgency. They are not fighting for the implementation of Sharia; rather, [they fight] for greater control over Baloch coast and resources.”

Pakistani media has reported 11 major attacks on Chinese nationals and projects in Balochistan and other parts of the country since 2018. Most of these attacks were claimed by Baloch separatist groups.

Some analysts consider the Islamist militants a bigger threat for regional security because of their transnational presence and higher number of fighters. “As for the Baloch militants, they have been trying to target Chinese interests for several years now and are in no mood to relent,” said senior expert Mir.

He said he thinks Pakistan will probably continue to exert pressure on the Afghan Taliban to reduce the threat of both TTP and Baloch militants.

Related

  • Taliban claim of combatting ISIS disputed following Kandahar bombing and Moscow attack: ASPI
Posted in ISIS/DAESH, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Security, Taliban | Tags: Taliban blowback, Taliban Security Failure, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan |

US drones violating Afghanistan’s airspace: Taliban

30th March, 2024 · admin

US MQ-9 Reaper drone (file photo)

AA: The interim Afghan government on Saturday said that US military drones are patrolling and “violating” Afghanistan’s airspaces. Speaking to Kabul-based TOLO news, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said: “These aircraft undoubtedly belong to the US, flying and crossing from the airspace of some neighboring countries to Afghanistan.” Click here to read more (external link).

Other US-Afghanistan News

  • Trump exaggerates claim that many Americans are ‘hostages’ in Afghanistan
Posted in Drone warfare, US-Afghanistan Relations |
Previous Posts
Next Posts

Subscribe to the Afghanistan Online YouTube Channel

---

---

---

Get Yours!

Peace be with you

Afghan Dresses

© Afghan Online Press
  • About
  • Links To More News
  • Opinion
  • Poll