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

  • Afghanistan Stalemate Once Favouring Taliban Begins To Shift, Says NRF Leader April 11, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 11, 2026 April 11, 2026
  • Sources: Taliban Arrest Shia Cleric in Herat Province April 11, 2026
  • Afghanistan: Sources say 12 people killed in Herat shooting April 11, 2026
  • Afghanistan’s new cricket head coach Richard Pybus arrives in Kabul April 11, 2026
  • US Has Accepted Only 3 Afghan Refugees Since October 2025 April 10, 2026
  • Afghan boxer Fereshta Khani wins gold at Pakistan national championships April 10, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 10, 2026 April 10, 2026
  • Two Taliban Members Killed In Badakhshan Attack, Says NRF April 9, 2026
  • World Bank: Afghanistan’s per capita GDP falls 5.6% despite economic growth April 9, 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

Plight of Afghan Refugees in Pakistan Filled With ‘Continuous Suffering’

24th June, 2023 · admin

Khaama: Following the return of the Taliban to power in 2021, new waves of Afghan refugees moved to Iran and Pakistan due to several reasons including fearing ng death threats and persecution by Afghanistan’s de facto regime. While in Pakistan, these migrants are faced with numerous challenges including arbitrary detentions, harassment, and imprisonment by Pakistani police due to failing to provide valid residential permits and visas. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Refugee News / Reports

  • Afghan Journalist Commits Suicide in Pakistan After His Application Rejected
  • International Refugee Day – The Afghan Refugee Crisis: Understanding the Issues and Proposing Solutions
Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban | Tags: Asylum, Escape from the Taliban |

Moscow Accuses US, UK of Exploiting Afghan Situation to Destabilize C. Asia

24th June, 2023 · admin

Nikolai Patrushev

Michael Hughes: Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev during remarks at a gathering of peers in Kazakhstan said the United States and Britain have tried to take advantage of the chaos in Afghanistan as part of a broader strategy to wreak havoc across Central Asia.

“The Americans and the British are trying to manipulate the terrorist insurgency in Afghanistan to their advantage by provoking tensions on the borders with Central Asian countries,” Patrushev said on Friday at the Russia-Central Asia meeting of security council chiefs. “Given the interest of Afghanistan’s neighbors in strengthening their borders and improving the training and equipping their security forces, the United States and its NATO allies are seeking to expand their presence in Central Asia and create more opportunities to influence them.”

Click here to read more.

Posted in Britain-Afghanistan Relations, Central Asia, ISIS/DAESH, Opinion/Editorial, Russia-Afghanistan Relations, Security, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: CIA activities in Afghanistan, Destabilization of Central Asia, US aiding ISIS |

Charities say Taliban intimidation diverts aid to Taliban members and causes

23rd June, 2023 · admin

Taliban militant (file photo)

NPR: NPR interviewed six Afghan aid workers from five Afghan provinces. They shared experiences of the Taliban attempting to divert foreign aid to their members through bullying, threats of legal action and even violence. The interviewees, who requested their locations be kept discreet, span four provinces in both the north and the south. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Corruption, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: Corrupt Taliban, Taliban stealing aid |

After Taliban bans opium, a guilt-racked commander winks at harvest

23rd June, 2023 · admin

WP: One year on, it’s not clear whether the Taliban will soon make a significant dent on a crop that the United Nations estimated accounts for one-tenth of the entire Afghan economy. The country’s poppy farmers supply the raw ingredients that, after being boiled into bricks, refined and exported to Europe via Iran and Pakistan, make up 80 percent of the world’s opium and heroin supply. If the Taliban falls short, international analysts say, it’ll be because of weak enforcement, corruption, the fact that no economic alternatives exist for farmers. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Corruption, Drugs, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: opium, Poppy cultivation, Taliban and Drugs, Taliban government failure |

Terminally ill child evacuated from Afghanistan dies in US custody

23rd June, 2023 · admin

The Hill: A 6-year-old child with a terminal illness who was evacuated from Afghanistan in the midst of the U.S. withdrawal in 2021 died in U.S. custody last week, according to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The unaccompanied child died on June 13 from “severe encephalopathy,” which is a general term for diseases and disorders that affect the brain. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Children, Health News, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Tolo News in Dari – June 23, 2023

23rd June, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

US, India urge IEA to form inclusive government in Afghanistan

23rd June, 2023 · admin

Biden

Ariana: US President Joe Biden and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi emphasized the importance of the formation of an inclusive political structure in Afghanistan and “called on the Taliban [IEA] to respect human rights of all Afghans, including women and girls, and to respect freedom of movement,” a joint statement said from the US and India released by White House on Thursday. The statement added that the leaders reiterated their strong support for a peaceful, secure and stable Afghanistan. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Recognition of Taliban Govt Depends on Treatment of Afghan Women: US
Posted in Afghan Women, India-Afghanistan Relations, Political News, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Rural School Closures Seen As Taliban Effort To Impose Full Control Over Afghan Education

23rd June, 2023 · admin

By Mohammad Sadiq Rishtinai and Abubakar Siddique
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
June 22, 2023

Eight-year-old Halima was devastated to learn that after overcoming numerous obstacles to her education under Taliban rule, her path to learning had been blocked with the closure of her private school.

“We all went home crying,” she told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi of the day she and her fellow students learned that their classes in Afghanistan’s southern Kandahar Province had been terminated.

“Our schools were closed first by the coronavirus [pandemic], then there was fighting, and now they have been shut again,” she said. “We just want to study.”

The rural classroom where she studied was a lifeline for learning basic mathematics, Afghan languages, science, and Islamic studies despite the ruling Taliban’s efforts to restrict girls’ and women’s access to education.

But on April 16, classes ended when the hardline Islamist authorities announced that the school, among Afghanistan’s thousands of Community-Based Education (CBE) centers, would be closed following unspecified “complaints from locals.”

Unrest and poverty in Kandahar and neighboring Helmand Province made the two regions a focal point for the development of CBE centers over the past three decades, with funding coming primarily from Western donors via the United Nations and international nongovernmental organizations.

Countrywide, more than 500,000 Afghan children currently attend CBE centers, which were established in cooperation with the communities in which they were based and are often held in private homes, mosques, or large tents.

Aid groups pay teachers’ salaries, provide educational materials, and offer the same curriculum taught in Afghan state schools. The centers, typically made up of a single classroom catering for up to 50 students, half of them girls, also filled an education void in remote areas where there were no state schools.

But since mid-April, nearly 1,600 CBE centers in Kandahar Province have been closed, depriving 50,000 students of an education. Similar numbers have been recorded in neighboring Helmand Province in a nationwide trend.

‘It’s Heartbreaking’

The termination of classes at Halima’s school and others like it appears to show that the narrow window for learning in remote areas is being closed as the Taliban looks to impose full control over how children are educated.

Munir Ahmad, who ran a literacy class inside his mudbrick home in Dand, a rural district in Kandahar Province, said he was forced to close his doors to students in April.

“It is heartbreaking to lose these classes because they serve children in remote areas where there are no other education opportunities,” he told Radio Azadi.

The Taliban, approaching two years in power, has not commented on whether it has ordered the school closures. But aid workers, rights campaigners, and education experts suggest that the hardline group is trying to ensure that young students receive an Islamic education even though the CBE centers follow the state model.

This, in turn, has led to concerns that the Taliban either intends to permanently shut down the schools or use them as venues to spread its extremist worldview and ideology.

“It is alarming,” said Heather Barr, associate director of the women’s rights division at Human Rights Watch. “The Taliban will likely change these schools in a way that is harmful to students, particularly girls.”

Education has been a main target of the Taliban’s extremist policies since it seized power in August 2021 and took steps to root out secular education.

Teenage girls were promptly banned from attending school despite the Taliban’s promises to the international community, which has listed the Taliban’s stance on girls’ and women’s education as a key obstacle to officially recognizing its government.

‘Jihadi Madrasahs’

Since taking power, the Taliban has consistently enforced strict gender segregation and replaced professional educators with clerics.

Last year, Taliban supreme leader Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada appointed key loyalists Mawlawi Habibullah Agha and Nida Mohmmad Nadim to lead the education and higher education ministries, respectively.

The two have diligently worked to expand the ban on women’s education and attempted to turn schools into a tool for indoctrination by tweaking the curriculum, critics say. In some cases, modern schools have been converted into madrasahs.

In December, the Taliban upped the ante by prohibiting women from receiving a university education.

And in the latest move, a Taliban official said this month that its government had established “jihadi madrasahs” in at least five provinces. Many Islamist militant groups, including the Taliban, emerged from such religious schools in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan in the 1980s.

Wazhma Tokhi, an Afghan human rights activist with a particular focus on women’s rights and education in Afghanistan, suggests that the recent school closures can be seen as another example of the group’s determination to root out secular education.

“They want to turn the schools into madrasahs,” Tokhi said.

The UN agency for children, UNICEF, which funds many CBE centers, says it is now holding discussions with the Taliban over “timelines and practicalities” for possibly handing them over to Afghan NGOs, many of which receive outside funding and have some protection from the Taliban.

Tokhi sees disastrous consequences if the Taliban assumes direct control over CBE centers.

“Our future is destroyed,” she said.

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 Afghan Children, Afghan Women, Education, Taliban | Tags: Kandahar, Life under Taliban rule |

Two Taliban Fighters Apprehended by Locals Before Attempted Sexual Assault on Two Girls in Ghor Province

23rd June, 2023 · admin

8am: According to the sources, on the night of Wednesday, June 21, two armed individuals affiliated with the Taliban were detained by the local residents in the Qatas area of Firozkoh city while attempting to sexually assault two girls. The sources state that these two Taliban members are residents of the Ghelmin area in Firozkoh city, the center of Ghor, and they had traveled to the Qatas area with the intention of committing sexual assault. It is worth mentioning that in May, the son of a Taliban commander was killed by gunfire after attempting to sexually assault a young girl. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Crime and Punishment, Security, Taliban | Tags: Ghor, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban Crime, Taliban Rapists, Taliban Security Failure |

SCO Members Lack Unity on Taliban Terrorism Concerns

23rd June, 2023 · admin

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
June 22, 2023

WASHINGTON — Frustration with the rising threat of terrorism emanating from Afghanistan emerged at a meeting this week of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a defense and economic alliance platform consisting of China, Russia, India, Iran and five other Asian states.

Russia and Tajikistan say Afghanistan, which holds an uncertain observer status in the SCO following the Taliban’s return to power in 2021, has become a breeding ground for regional terrorist groups.

“According to our information, terrorist groups such as al-Qaida, Hizb ut-Tahrir, the Islamic Movement of Eastern Turkistan, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, TTP, Jamaat Ansarullah are currently present in Afghanistan and pose serious threats to neighboring countries,” said Amirbeg Begnazarov, a representative of Tajikistan, at an event Wednesday jointly hosted by the SCO and the United Nations.

He said his nation was “very concerned about the concentration of different terrorist groups next to our borders that we’ve never had before [and it] is increasing day by day.”

Russia’s defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, recently said that the Taliban’s return to power had bolstered terrorist organizations operating in Afghanistan, a charge echoed by other highly placed Russians.

Vladimir Voronkov, a former Russian diplomat who now heads the U.N. Office of Counter-Terrorism, said this week that Afghanistan had become “an epicenter for the dissemination of terrorism” under the Taliban.

Unlike Russia, China has refrained from making such blistering allegations against the Taliban and has instead actively engaged the isolated Islamist regime.

“Afghanistan is at a critical phase of transitioning from chaos to order,” Zhang Jun, the Chinese permanent representative at the U.N., told a Security Council meeting on Afghanistan on Wednesday.

Zhang said the international community should engage with de facto Taliban authorities and help the country achieve stability and economic prosperity.

Domestic vs. regional concerns

Russia cautiously welcomed the Taliban’s return to power following the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021.

Shy of a formal recognition, Russia has handed over the Afghan Embassy in Moscow to the Taliban. It maintained its diplomatic mission in Kabul until September, when it was attacked.

Ten people, including two Russian Embassy staff, were killed and several others injured in the suicide attack claimed by the Islamic State extremist group.

The attack prompted Russia to shut its diplomatic mission in Afghanistan, warning about increased terrorism risks originating from the landlocked nation and threatening its Central Asian neighbors where Russian troops are stationed.

Within SCO members, “differing threat perceptions of particular extremist or separatist groups, political sensitivities and sovereignty concerns, as well as lack of genuine trust among member states, make concrete counterterrorism cooperation very difficult — besides some limited information sharing,” Jiayi Zhou, an expert at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, told VOA.

While Russia is more vocal about terrorism threats it perceives from the Islamic State group, some SCO members see threats from other militant groups allegedly based in Afghanistan, experts say.

“The trust deficits and divergences within the SCO have resulted in most member countries using bilateral channels to establish ties with the Taliban for geostrategic, geoeconomics and individual security guarantees,” said Ayjaz Ahmad Wani, a researcher at the Observer Research Foundation, an Indian policy institute.

Pakistan has followed the Chinese lead even while officials say Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, a militant group seeking to overthrow the government in Islamabad, has intensified terrorist attacks from its purported havens inside Afghanistan.

Last month, at the 5th China-Afghanistan-Pakistan Foreign Ministers’ Dialogue in Islamabad, the parties agreed to promote trilateral cooperation in security, development and political fronts.

“The SCO as a regional security platform has largely been ineffective,” said Zhou, adding that member states have pursued different security and political priorities since the inception of the organization more than two decades ago.

Toppled from power in 2001 by a U.S.-led coalition for their alleged support for international terrorism, the Taliban, even after recapturing power in 2021, face terrorism sanctions from many countries.

Taliban leaders maintain that they host no terrorist group and do not threaten the security of any nation.

Posted in Political News, Security, Taliban |
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