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  • 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
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 1, 2026 April 1, 2026
  • More Than 28,000 Afghans Return From Iran As Crisis Deepens April 1, 2026
  • From Rotor Drones to Kamikaze UAVs: Tracking the Taliban’s Five-Year Shift March 31, 2026
  • Nearly 1,500 Afghans died on migration routes in 2025, IOM says March 31, 2026
  • From Pressuring Staff to Embezzling Donor Funds: Complaints Against Taliban Environmental Chief in Herat March 31, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – March 31, 2026 March 31, 2026

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Mujeeb Ur Rahman climbs to 3rd spot in ICC’s ODI bowling rankings

23rd August, 2023 · admin

Mujeeb Rahman Zadran

Ariana: Afghanistan spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who has enjoyed a career-best ranking of second in the past, has advanced three places to third position in the ICC Men’s ODI Bowling Rankings after returning figures of three for 33 in Tuesday’s opening fixture of a three-match series against Pakistan. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Cricket, Mujeeb Ur Rahman |

Tragic Demise of Panjshir Resident: Tortured to Death by the Taliban in Herat

23rd August, 2023 · admin

8am: Distressing news has emerged from local sources in Panjshir, reporting the tragic death of a resident from this province who fell victim to brutal torture at the hands of the Taliban in Herat. The individual, originally planning to travel to Iran, was apprehended by the Taliban at the Islam Qala border crossing. Subsequently, he underwent severe torture during his 22-day captivity in Herat, which ultimately led to his untimely demise. According to accounts provided by Hasht-e Subh, the victim has been identified as Fayazul-Haq. On Tuesday, August 22, reports indicate that he was “strangled” within the confines of the Herat prison by Taliban operatives. Further information reveals that the Taliban has yet to release the remains of the deceased to his grieving family, adding to their distress. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Detain and torture by Taliban, Life under Taliban rule, Panjshir |

‘Forced To Dress Like a Muslim’: Taliban Imposes Restrictions On Afghanistan’s Sikh, Hindu Minorities

23rd August, 2023 · admin

Afghan Hindu and Sikh citizens celebrate their new year ceremony in Kabul in 2018.

Freshta Negah
Abubakar Siddique
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
August 22, 2023

When the Taliban seized power in 2021, there were concerns that some of Afghanistan’s tiny non-Muslim minorities could vanish.

Two years on, those fears are becoming realized. Afghanistan’s last-known Jew fled the country shortly after the Taliban takeover. Meanwhile, the Sikh and Hindu communities are believed to have shrunk to just a handful of families.

Under the Taliban, Sikhs and Hindus have faced severe restrictions, including on their appearances, and have been banned from marking their religious holidays in public, leaving many with no choice but to escape their homeland.

“I cannot go anywhere freely,” Fari Kaur, one of the last remaining Sikhs in the capital, Kabul, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi.

“When I go out, I’m forced to dress like a Muslim so that I can’t be identified as a Sikh,” she said, in reference to the Taliban’s order that all women must wear the all-encompassing burqa or niqab.

Kaur’s father was killed in a suicide attack targeting Sikhs and Hindus in the eastern city of Jalalabad in 2018. The attack reportedly led as many as 1,500 Sikhs to leave the country, including Kaur’s mother and sisters.

But Kaur refused to leave and stayed in Kabul to fulfil her father’s dream that she finish school.

In March 2020, 25 worshipers were killed when Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K) militants stormed a Sikh temple in Kabul. Following the attack, most of the remaining members of the minority left Afghanistan.

Again, Kaur refused to leave. But now, more than two years after the Taliban seized power, she said the lack of religious freedom under the militants has left her no choice but to seek refuge abroad.

“We have not celebrated our key festivals since the Taliban returned to power,” she said. “We have very few community members left behind in Afghanistan. We cannot even look after our temples.”

History Of Persecution

There were up to 100,000 Hindus and Sikhs in Afghanistan in the 1980s. But the war that broke out in 1979 and the onset of growing persecution pushed many out.

During the civil war of the 1990s, the Taliban and rival Islamist groups pledged to protect minorities. But many Sikhs and Hindus lost their homes and businesses and fled to India.

During its first stint in power from 1996-2001, the Taliban caused an international uproar after the militants announced that all Sikhs and Hindus in the country would be required to wear yellow badges.

The Taliban prohibited Sikhs and Hindus from building new temples. They were also forced to pay a special tax called jizya, which was historically imposed by Muslim rulers on their non-Muslim subjects.

Following the U.S.-led invasion in 2001, Sikhs and Hindus were granted the same rights as other Afghans and also received seats in the parliament.

When the Taliban regained power in August 2021, it attempted to assuage the fears of non-Muslim Afghans. The militants visited Sikh and Hindu temples to try and assure the remaining members of the communities of their commitment to their safety and well-being.

But the Taliban’s draconian restrictions on Sikhs and Hindus have forced many to seek a way out of their homeland.

‘Extreme Desperation’

Many of the Afghan Sikhs and Hindus who have left the country have moved to India, where most face a life of poverty.

“We abandoned our country out of extreme desperation,” said Chabul Singh, a 57-year-old Sikh man who left Afghanistan with his wife and two sons several years ago.

The family now lives outside the Indian capital, New Delhi, where Singh and his young sons eke out a living by doing menial jobs.

“In Afghanistan, our distinctive turbans gave us away, and we were killed both by the Taliban and Daesh,” he told Radio Azadi, referring to IS-K by its Arabic acronym. Sikhs often wrap their hair, which they are not supposed to cut, in a turban.

Despite his family’s struggles in India, Singh said returning to Afghanistan is not an option.

“In Afghanistan, our Muslim brothers often asked us, ‘Why have you come from India?'” he said. “But here in India, they ask us, ‘Why don’t you go back to Afghanistan?'”

Niala Mohammad, the director of policy and strategy at the nonprofit Muslim Public Affairs Council in Washington, said the situation for religious minorities in Afghanistan — including Hindus, Sikhs, Bahai’s, Christians, Ahmadis, and Shi’ite Muslims — has deteriorated sharply under Taliban rule.

“The situation continues to deteriorate as political extremist factions that claim to represent Islam, such as the Taliban, ascend to power in the region,” said Mohammad, who was previously the South Asia analyst for the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. “This exodus of diverse religious groups has left a void in the country’s social fabric.”

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.
Posted in Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Hindus, Afghan Sikhs, Life under Taliban rule, Religious minorities in Afghanistan |

Former Afghan Leaders Powerless Inside, Outside Their Homeland

23rd August, 2023 · admin

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
August 22, 2023

When the Taliban entered Kabul in August 2021, nearly the entire leadership of the Afghan government fled the country fearing for their lives.

President Ashraf Ghani, accompanied by his wife and closest aides, sought asylum in the United Arab Emirates, while the rest of his Cabinet, including his two vice presidents, scattered to different parts of the world.

In a video statement three days later, Ghani said his departure might have been the only way to escape the fate of his predecessor, former President Mohammad Najibullah, who was tortured and killed by the Taliban in 1996.

“If I had stayed, the president of Afghanistan would have been executed in front of the eyes of Afghans once again,” Ghani said.

What the Taliban would have done to Ghani is open to speculation, but Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban’s chief spokesman, told VOA that the group had no intention of harming anyone, including Ghani.

That is not entirely true. The United Nations reported Tuesday that since seizing power, the Taliban have killed, tortured, jailed and mistreated hundreds of former Afghan military personnel — a charge the Taliban deny.

But some former leaders did choose to stay in Afghanistan and have been able to remain politically active, if only in a restrained way, thanks to a surprising amnesty announced by the Taliban for its former enemies.

Hamid Karzai, the nation’s first democratically elected president who signed the U.S.-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement in 2012, declared his commitment to the country in a video posted on Facebook within days of the Taliban takeover in August 2021.

“To the esteemed residents of Kabul, I say that my family, my daughters and I are here with you,” Karzai said in the Dari language as his three small daughters huddled with him.
Similarly, Abdullah Abdullah, a former chief executive and foreign minister of Afghanistan, chose to remain in Kabul despite his history of opposition to the Taliban.

“I personally had a conversation with former President Karzai 10 days prior to the collapse of the government and asked him specifically what his plans were if some morning he woke up to the scenario of Kabul overrun by the Taliban,” Omar Zakhilwal, a former Afghan minister, told VOA.

“He responded that he’d thought about it, realized the possibilities of very high risks to him and his family, particularly in the initial moments of the overrun, but under no circumstances would either he or his family leave Kabul.”

‘No influence or freedom’

Inside Afghanistan, former leaders like Karzai and Abdullah appear active, meeting with locals, diplomats and aid workers. On their verified social media accounts, they issue carefully crafted statements calling on de facto authorities to reopen secondary schools for girls and allow women to work, while avoiding direct criticism of the Taliban’s globally condemned misogynistic policies.

What has become evident in the two years since the fall of Kabul, however, is that regardless of whether they chose to flee or remain, none of the former leaders has had any significant influence over Taliban policies.

“Those who stayed in Afghanistan under the Taliban have no influence or freedom to stand against the Taliban,” Sediq Seddiqi, a former spokesperson to Ghani, told VOA.

Outside of Afghanistan, Ghani and other former Afghan officials are more critical of the Taliban on social media platforms.

“If the Afghan politicians in exile can bring about an enduring political settlement and work together for a better Afghanistan, it is justified,” Seddiqi said.

It remains uncertain what kind of a political settlement the exiled Afghan leaders could reach with the Taliban, particularly now that they have little, if any, leverage.

“History will judge harshly of those who left,” Nader Nadery, a former Afghan official and a member of the former government’s negotiating team with the Taliban, told VOA.

Now a research fellow at the Wilson Center in the United States, Nadery said many Afghans appreciate Karzai, Abdullah and those former leaders who have remained in Afghanistan.

“When the time is hard, leaders stay with their people,” he said.

Exodus of skilled Afghans hurts country

Concerned that the Taliban would target Afghans who worked for the U.S. and the Afghan governments, the United States airlifted more than 120,000 individuals from Kabul in August 2021.

Among them were Afghan lawmakers, ministers, journalists and human rights activists.

Over the past two years, the United States, Canada and some European countries have continued evacuating tens of thousands of at-risk Afghans.

Prevalent poverty and Taliban repressions have also forced many Afghans to migrate to Turkey, Iran, Pakistan and elsewhere.

The exodus of mostly educated and skilled Afghans continues to hurt Afghanistan, Zakhilwal said.

“Afghanistan would have been better off if not only the political leaders but also the tens of thousands of other [mostly educated] Afghans who were evacuated by the West had remained in Afghanistan,” the former official said.

For others, however, life under the Taliban is unbearable.

“Afghanistan now has become the most oppressive country for women,” Pashtana Dorani, an Afghan women’s rights activist, wrote last week on X, formerly known as Twitter.

As the Taliban consolidate their grip on power, rejecting domestic and international calls to respect women’s rights and forming an inclusive government, former leaders — inside the country and in exile — appear to have little sway on how the Taliban govern Afghanistan.

Last week, the Taliban’s Justice Ministry announced that political parties were outlawed, effectively forcing their opponents to either leave the country or submit to non-democratic rule.

Posted in Political News, Taliban | Tags: Ashraf Ghani, Dr. Abdullah, Hamid Karzai |

UN Accuses Taliban of Killing 200 Ex-Afghan Officials, Security Personnel

22nd August, 2023 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
August 22, 2023

ISLAMABAD — The United Nations said Tuesday that it had recorded at least 218 “extrajudicial” killings in Afghanistan and hundreds of other “serious” human rights abuses since the Taliban seized power two years ago.

The victims were allegedly mostly individuals affiliated with the U.S.-backed former government in Kabul, including military, intelligence, and police personnel.

“In most instances, individuals were detained by de facto [Taliban] security forces, often briefly, before being killed,” the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan [UNAMA] said in its new report.

While some were killed in custody, others were taken to undisclosed locations before being killed, with their bodies either dumped or handed over to family members, the report said.

UNAMA documented 800 incidents of extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrest, torture and enforced disappearance, saying they took place despite a much-touted “general amnesty” by the Taliban for former Afghan officials.

The then-insurgent Taliban retook control of the country on August 15, 2021 as U.S.-led NATO troops withdrew after nearly 20 years of involvement in the Afghan war.

Most of the killings reported by UNAMA took place in the four months after the Taliban took over the conflict-torn country.

Taliban supreme leader Hibattullah Akhundzada announced an amnesty for former government members, including those who fled the country fearing retribution, soon after his group seized power.

“While the introduction of the general amnesty by the de facto authorities was a welcome step, ongoing human rights violations… indicate that the general amnesty has not been fully upheld,” UNAMA said.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid swiftly rejected the U.N. charges, saying the general amnesty was being effectively and fully implemented.

He wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that relevant authorities had investigated some “personal revenge” incidents involving unknown individuals, but their number was “minimal.”

Mujahid alleged that “some sections within the U.N. system ignore ground realities in Afghanistan and always look for adverse developments to spread propaganda.”

UNAMA quoted the Taliban-led foreign ministry as disputing the reported violations of the general amnesty, saying it has not received reports of any non-compliance with the order of Akhundzada. It vowed to investigate and bring to justice those guilty of disobeying the decree.

The ministry rejected allegations Taliban forces had detained or tortured any military personnel because of their association with the former Afghan government. However, it acknowledged that action had been taken against those challenging the Taliban government, known as the Islamic Emirate.

“No military staff of the previous administration has been arrested, detained, or tortured because of his activities in the security institutions. Those employees of the previous administration who joined the opposition groups of the Islamic Emirate or had military activities to the detriment of the system have been arrested and introduced to judicial authorities,” the ministry said.

The Taliban ministry asked UNAMA to share any “specific and documented claims” about human rights violations to enable security forces to investigate them.

The U.N. high commissioner for human rights, in a statement released with the UNAMA report said its findings presented a “sobering picture” of the treatment of former Afghan government officials.

“Even more so, given they were assured that they would not be targeted, it is a betrayal of the people’s trust,” said Volker Türk. He urged the Taliban to prevent further such violations and hold perpetrators to account.

No foreign government has recognized the Taliban as the legitimate ruler of Afghanistan over human rights concerns and the curbs they have placed on women’s access to work and education.

Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi reiterated his allegations Tuesday that Western countries are using the issue of human rights as a “pressure tactic” and an “excuse” to deny international recognition to his government.

Related

  • UNAMA: IMPUNITY PREVAILS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS AGAINST FORMER GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS AND ARMED FORCE MEMBERS
  • No End to Taliban Revenge Killings in Afghanistan
  • Taliban Detain Former Government Military Official in Parwan Province
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Crime and Punishment, Human Rights, Taliban, UN-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Revenge killings, Taliban Amnesty Violation, War Crime |

Tolo News in Dari – August 22, 2023

22nd August, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Turkish soldiers imprisoned for raping Afghan refugee woman

22nd August, 2023 · admin

Khaama: Two Turkish soldiers have been sentenced to the maximum prison term for the rape of an Afghan refugee woman during her deportation from Turkey to Iran in January. On January 3, during the incident, contract soldiers O.K. and A.C.D. singled out a 25-year-old woman from a group of 8 individuals they had brought to the border. Tragically, the soldiers raped the woman and compelled her to flee the border. The soldiers, who had initially thrown stones at the woman near the border, later came back to the police station. After their departure, the woman revisited the border and cried out for help. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Immigration News

  • Over 8 million Afghan citizens emigrate to neighbouring countries
Posted in Crime and Punishment, Refugees and Migrants, Turkey-Afghanistan Relations |

Explosion In Kabul Kills Two People Inside Car, Injures One

21st August, 2023 · admin

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
August 21, 2023

An explosion in Kabul on August 21 killed two people inside a vehicle and injured a passenger, the security command of the Taliban-led government said. Khalid Zadran, a spokesman for the security command, told the Taliban-controlled Bakhtar news agency that the explosion occurred in the Afghan capital’s Darul Aman district and was caused by a sticky bomb. An investigation into the incident has begun, Zadran said without providing further details. No group has yet claimed responsibility for the blast.

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.
Posted in Security, Taliban | Tags: Taliban Security Failure |

Tolo News in Dari – August 21, 2023

21st August, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Security Incidents in Pakistan Due to Internal Problems: Haqqani

21st August, 2023 · admin

Sirajuddin Haqqani

Tolo News: The acting Interior Minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani, said that the recent incidents in Pakistan are due to its internal problems, which Islamabad itself should address. He warned that if Pakistan seeks to solve its issues by force through Afghanistan, the interests of citizens of both countries will be harmed. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Haqqani Network, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Political News, Security, Taliban | Tags: Sirajuddin Haqqani, Taliban blowback |
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