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Taliban Delegation Visits Pakistan Amid Expulsion of Afghans

15th November, 2023 · admin

Sarah Zaman
VOA News
November 14, 2023

ISLAMABAD — A high-level trade delegation of the Afghan Taliban government held trilateral talks on Tuesday with Pakistan and Uzbekistan in Islamabad. The talks come as Pakistan authorities are carrying out a mass expulsion of Afghans residing illegally in the country.

The delegation of Taliban government officials and Afghan businessmen, led by the acting Minister of Commerce and Industry, Alhaji Nuruddin Azizi, took part in meetings that “centered around advancing the trans-Afg project, trilateral transit and trade, challenges to regional connectivity, and other pertinent matters,” according to a statement by the Afghan embassy in Islamabad, posted on X, formerly Twitter.

The Trans-Afghan project is a 760-kilometer (472-mile) passenger and freight rail line in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan. The three countries signed the agreement in July in Islamabad. The project is slated to be completed by 2027.

Calling the trilateral talks a significant step toward strengthening economic ties and regional connectivity, Pakistan’s Minister of Commerce Gohar Ejaz said on X, “bright prospects for trade, investment and connectivity lie ahead for mutual benefit of three countries.”

The Afghan Taliban delegation’s visit to Islamabad comes at a time when relations between the two sides are tense publicly.

Pakistan accuses the Taliban of taking insufficient action to reign in cross-border terrorism and providing haven to leaders and members of the banned militant outfit Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar recently told media that Islamabad had asked Afghan Taliban “bluntly to choose between Pakistan and the TTP.” He said that Pakistan shared details and a list of wanted militant leaders with Afghan authorities, but that Kabul did not deliver on its counterterrorism pledges.

In response, Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid once again denied Kabul was providing sanctuary to anti-Pakistan terrorists saying, “Pakistan should address their domestic problems instead of blaming Afghanistan for their failure.”

Alleging that Afghan citizens were taking part in terror attacks inside Pakistan, Islamabad last month ordered all those residing illegally in the country to leave or face deportation after November 1. The decision, although applicable to people of any nationality, primarily affected 1.7 million Afghans living in Pakistan to escape war and poverty.

The Taliban called Pakistan’s expulsion of Afghans “unacceptable” and “unjust.”

Speaking to VOA, Special Representative of Pakistan on Afghanistan Asif Durrani downplayed the recent tensions, saying each government was simply expressing its point of view.

“I don’t think there were harsh statements, neither from Pakistan side nor from Afghan side,” Durrani said.

The envoy rejected the notion that Pakistan’s support of the Taliban in its 20-year war against western troops had backfired since his country was seeing terrorism rise since the group’s return to power.

“This is a process, and we hope that good sense would prevail,” he said about the recent tensions in Pakistan-Afghanistan relations. He also denied Pakistan ever supported the then-insurgent group.

Prior to Tuesday’s trilateral trade talks, the Taliban commerce minister met Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jilani.

“The FM [foreign minister] said full potential for regional trade and connectivity can be harnessed with collective action against terrorism,” the Pakistani foreign ministry said on X.

An Afghan embassy statement on X after the meeting said Azizi discussed transfer of property of Afghan refugees with Pakistan, among other issues.

Since the expulsion orders, nearly 300,000 Afghans have left Pakistan voluntarily while more than 1,300 have been deported. Many have been forced to leave their small businesses set up over the years or sell valuables such as cattle or construction material well below market prices on their way out.

Although Pakistan has lifted restrictions on how much currency Afghans returning to their country can take with them, reports of border guards taking cash and jewelry from Afghan returnees have emerged.

Durrani rejected the reports, saying, “I don’t think there is truth in it.” He said Pakistani border guards are disciplined and follow the orders of the government.

Speaking to VOA, Pakistan’s former ambassador to Afghanistan Mansoor Ahmad Khan said the talks were a positive development.

“Since a visit is now already taking place, I see signs of encouragement after the past few weeks when we saw there was no engagement.”

He said he believes the two sides will continue to work together.

After a day of talks, Pakistani commerce minister Ejaz held a brief joint press conference with the visiting Uzbek minister. The Taliban did not make an appearance.

Pakistani and Taliban officials will continue talks on Wednesday.

Posted in Economic News, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban, Uzbekistan-Afghanistan Relations |

Continued Harassment of Civilians by the Taliban: Residents of Panjshir Endure Increasing Struggles

14th November, 2023 · admin

8am: Some residents of Panjshir claim that the Taliban periodically harass the local people, accusing them of possessing weapons and collaborating with the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRF). They assert that the Taliban detain and imprison “one or two individuals” from the residents of this province and Kabul daily, but most of these incidents are not reported by the media. Furthermore, over the past two years, the Taliban have imposed strict restrictions, making living conditions challenging for the residents of Panjshir province. However, local inhabitants urge the international community and human rights organizations to exert serious pressure on the group to prevent “human rights violations” by the Taliban in the province of Panjshir. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Ethnic Issues, Human Rights, NRF - National Resistance Front, Taliban | Tags: Detain and torture by Taliban, Life under Taliban rule, Panjshir |

Tolo News in Dari – November 14, 2023

14th November, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Banning Scholarships: The Taliban Minister Tells Students, ‘You Go as Muslims, Return as Communists’

14th November, 2023 · admin

Nadeem

8am: The Ministry of Higher Education, under Taliban control, has hindered the travel of around 500 male students to Russia. Scholarship recipients for Russian universities report that they have been accepted at various academic levels, and it has taken about six months for their study visas to be issued. However, Neda Mohammad Nadeem, the acting head of the Taliban Ministry of Higher Education, is now expressing concerns about the faith of these students, telling them that they are going as Muslims but will return as communists. According to these students, Nadeem has informed them that they “cannot invite others to Islam and must tell the Russians that their religion is false.” The students further claim that this ministry had recently confiscated their passports and academic documents, stating that all students must undergo an ideological examination before being granted permission to travel. They add that the ministry initially conducted belief examinations on the students but has now retracted its stance, referring the matter to Mullah Habibullah Akhundzada, the supreme leader of the group. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Taliban Shutdown Numerous Girls’ Educational Centers in Herat Province
Posted in Education, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Nida Mohammad Nadim, Taliban war on education |

Paktika Officials: Gayan Earthquake Victims Still Homeless

14th November, 2023 · admin

Tolo News: Local officials of the Gayan district said that houses have not yet been built for many earthquake victims in the district. According to them, more than 7,000 houses in the district were destroyed in the deadly earthquake of 1401. The residents of Gayan Paktika district want the authorities to pay attention to the construction of roads, health centers, and other parts of their lives in addition to the construction of shelters. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Environmental News | Tags: Earthquake, Paktika, Taliban government failure |

The Agony of Being a Woman in the Taliban Territory

13th November, 2023 · admin

8am: The latest Gallup poll shows that women’s satisfaction with life in Afghanistan under Taliban rule has decreased from 29% in 2022 to 11% in 2023. As per this survey, the lives of 96% of women and 93% of men in 2023 were characterized in a way that the lowest level is considered “suffering.” What Gallup found exhibits the undeniable reality of Afghanistan under Taliban rule. This group, characterized by misogyny, does not grant women the minor opportunity to break free from the severe restrictions imposed by them. Some women who described their lives in Taliban territory as satisfactory are those who have aligned with the Taliban due to extensive poisonous and wide-ranging propaganda of Islamic extremism, making them accept what they endure as complete Sharia and Islamic principles and rules. These women are more oppressed than other women who at least protest against their conditions and therefore suffer. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Tragic Increase in Suicides in Faryab Province: Four Individuals Take Their Lives in Two Weeks
Posted in Afghan Women, Everyday Life, Human Rights, Society, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Suicide, Taliban government failure, Taliban war on women |

Tolo News in Dari – November 13, 2023

13th November, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

‘I’m Very Worried’: Former Afghan Soldiers Fear Forced Return To Taliban-Ruled Homeland

13th November, 2023 · admin

By Jawid Hasanzada
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
November 13, 2023

As Afghans living illegally in Iran and Pakistan come under increased risk of deportation, soldiers who fought against the now-ruling Taliban fear a return to their homeland will mean certain death.

Tens of thousands of former members of the Afghan National Security Forces — which included the former government’s army, special forces, national police, and intelligence service — fled to neighboring countries as the Taliban seized power in August 2021.

There they joined the millions of Afghans who have settled in Pakistan and Iran over the past four decades of war, poverty, and political upheaval in Afghanistan.

In recent weeks, however, Pakistan has made good on its order for 1.7 million Afghans in the country without proper documentation to leave by November 1. The measure has spurred over 300,000 people to return to Afghanistan and has been followed up by police roundups and forced deportations.

Iran, meanwhile, has been taking its own hard line against Afghans living illegally in the country. In recent weeks, Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi has twice stated that those who lack legal status will be sent back to Afghanistan. The threat affects around 4.5 million Afghans who live in Iran, most of them seeking refuge and temporary work.

Fahim, a former Afghan soldier living in Pakistan, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi that he feared deportation and a return to Afghanistan.

“The Pakistani government has taken its measures seriously and our visas have expired,” he said. “We are deportees. There is no guarantee [of safety] from the Islamic Emirate [the Taliban government] for members of the military, and I’m very worried.”

While the Taliban offered a general amnesty to members of the Afghan military, police, and bureaucrats shortly after its return to power, international rights watchdogs and the United Nations have documented widespread cases of retribution — including extrajudicial killings and torture — against those who worked with the former Afghan government.

In a report issued in August, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said the Taliban was responsible for at least 218 extrajudicial killings, 14 enforced disappearances, over 144 instances of torture and ill-treatment, and 424 arbitrary arrests and detentions of former government officials and members of the armed forces from August 15, 2021, to June 30.

By some accounts, some 30,000 Afghan soldiers fled to Iran to escape the risk of being hunted down by the Taliban.

Fawad, a former Afghan soldier who now lives in Iran, left his homeland due to security concerns. Now he fears the prospect of facing that threat again. “There were threats in Afghanistan,” he said, describing efforts by the Taliban to capture ex-military members. “They came to specific addresses several times to find us.”

Fawad says he and other Afghan soldiers are worried about being deported, saying that “we face a serious threat in Afghanistan.”

Many former Afghan soldiers who remain in Afghanistan live in hiding, regularly moving from place to place, to avoid Taliban detection.

Military officials from the ousted Afghan government have stressed the seriousness of the situation and have called on former allies and the UN to take steps to protect members of the former Afghan security forces.

“One hundred percent, their lives and their families are in danger,” General Farid Ahmadi, a former special-forces commander, told Radio Azadi. “Currently, thousands of their former comrades are in Taliban prisons. There is no news of their fate.”

Many ex-Afghan security personnel accuse Western countries of abandoning them after the Taliban takeover.

Ahmadi said that the “United Nations and the United States and the United Kingdom, who worked with them in the fight against terrorism, should not be indifferent to the fate of [security force members’] families.”

The Taliban did not respond to Radio Azadi’s requests for comment.

Copyright (c) 2023. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • Pakistan Opens More Border Points As Afghan Deportations Continue
Posted in Human Rights, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban | Tags: deportations, Escape from the Taliban |

The Afghan National Football Team Heads to Qatar

13th November, 2023 · admin

8am: The Afghan national football team departed from Kabul for Qatar to participate in the second round of preliminary matches for the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the 2027 AFC Asian Cup. Under the management of the Taliban, the Afghanistan Football Federation stated that the national team set off for Qatar on Monday, November 13. Afghanistan is scheduled to compete against the national teams of Qatar, India, and Kuwait in these upcoming competitions. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Football (Soccer) |

Taliban’s Shocking Atrocity: Detention and Electric Torture of Religious School Official in Herat

12th November, 2023 · admin

Taliban militant (file photo)

8am: Local sources in Herat report that the Taliban have detained and subjected an official of a religious school, along with his sons, to imprisonment and torture. According to the sources, the Taliban have subjected these individuals to torture, utilizing electric shocks. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Detain and torture by Taliban, Herat, Life under Taliban rule |
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