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  • 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

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Aid Group: World Failing Afghanistan During Major Locust Outbreak

19th June, 2023 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
June 19, 2023

ISLAMABAD — A global aid agency warned Monday that a large-scale plague of locusts is ravaging northern Afghanistan and could destroy 1.2 million metric tons of wheat, almost one-quarter of the country’s annual harvest.

“The escalating situation threatens to plunge millions of people into worsening levels of hunger,” the nongovernmental aid group Save the Children said in a statement.

The locust outbreak comes as funding shortfalls have cut off food aid for 8 million people in Afghanistan in the past two months, the group said. It urged the international community to increase humanitarian aid and resume development assistance to help prevent the impoverished country from spiraling into “famine-like conditions.”

Save the Children said that the Moroccan locust, one of the world’s most damaging plant pests, is sweeping across eight of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces, the country’s wheat basket.

The agency said the outbreak has come at the worst possible time for Afghanistan, where more than 15 million people — one-third of the population — are projected to face crisis levels of hunger over the next five months, including 3.2 million children.

Aid organizations face a $2.2 billion shortfall in humanitarian funding to support Afghanistan’s most vulnerable children and families, especially women and girls.

Arshad Malik, the Save the Children country director, said that millions of children would suffer unless humanitarian aid is immediately increased.

“However, humanitarian aid alone is not a quick fix. The underlying drivers of hunger, including resuming development aid and support to the country’s ailing economy, will also need to be addressed.”

Since the Taliban regained control of the conflict-torn South Asian nation in August 2021, the international community has suspended development assistance and imposed financial sanctions.

The United Nations says the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, stemming from years of war and prolonged drought, has worsened since the Taliban took control of the country.

U.N. officials say that the Taliban’s discriminatory policies against Afghan women have caused the humanitarian and economic situation in the country to deteriorate. The hardline group has barred Afghan women from working for the United Nations and other aid agencies.

The Taliban have suspended girls’ education beyond the sixth grade and banned many women government employees from workplaces.

The restrictions on Afghan women, and other human rights concerns, have deterred foreign governments from recognizing the Taliban as legitimate rulers of the country.

Posted in Economic News | Tags: Locust Infestation in Afghanistan |

Tolo News in Dari – June 19, 2023

19th June, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban’s Controversial Order: Motorcycle Accident Victims Denied Treatment at Health Centers in Ghazni

19th June, 2023 · admin

8am: It appears that the Taliban issued this warning in response to a rise in traffic incidents in Ghazni. However, some healthcare workers view this action by the Taliban as a violation of public health regulations. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News, Taliban, Traffic accidents | Tags: Ghazni, Life under Taliban rule |

Afghans Seeking Refuge In Russia Face Higher Hurdles

18th June, 2023 · admin

By Andrei Krasno
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
June 18, 2023

In February 2020, Afghan citizen Ali Mahdi Hussein arrived in the southern Russian resort town of Mineralniye Vody, known for its health spas, at the invitation of a relative.

During his stay, the militant Taliban continued its territorial advances against government forces at home. Before he was due to depart for home, Hussein requested – and received – temporary asylum in Russia.

When he sought to extend his asylum at the end of 2022, more than a year after the Taliban toppled the Western-backed government and imposed its repressive form of authority over Afghanistan, he was in for an unpleasant surprise.

The branch of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the Stavropol region, where Mineralniye Vody is located, turned him down. Afghan law under the Taliban provides for the protection of core civil rights, it said.

Furthermore, it claimed Hussein was not in a high-risk group category.

Hussein’s case was not an exception, advocates for Afghans in Russia say. They say that Russian authorities, especially in its southern regions, have been turning down a greater number of Afghan requests for temporary asylum, despite the dire political and economic situation in the Asian nation.

“The Ministry of Internal Affairs usually extended the permission to stay in Russia – first for three months, then for a year, and so on. There was practically no need to go to court [to appeal] because there were few refusals,” said Ebadulla Masumi, the head of an Afghan community group in Stavropol.

But that trend has now rotated 180 degrees — and it’s unclear why, Masumi said.

“In 2023, they began to deny everyone [asylum extensions] without explanation. There has not been a single positive decision during this time. I don’t know what has changed – the law or the policy of the state,” he said.

Moscow doesn’t publish the number of rejected asylum cases, but does publish those approved. From 2007 to 2011, Russia gave temporary asylum to more than 1,000 Afghans per year on average, more than to refugees from any other country. Temporary asylum is granted for one year and can be extended if the political situation in the home country does not change.

From 2020 to 2022, amid restricted travel due to the COVID pandemic, Russia granted on average only 600 requests for temporary political asylum to Afghans.

The suspected increase in Afghan asylum rejections comes amid growing repression by the Russian state, which has clamped down harder than ever on all forms of dissent following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

That war has also triggered a large influx of Ukrainians to southern Russia, thousands of whom have applied for asylum.

Russian authorities may be rejecting Afghan asylum seekers amid concern they will seek monetary assistance, Andrei Serenko, the head of the Center for the Study of Afghan Politics, told RFE/RL.

He said Russian authorities are using the resources set aside for such issues on Ukrainians. Russia granted nearly 9,000 Ukrainians and 732 Afghans temporary asylum in 2022, government data shows.

“You can say they were just unlucky — they got here at the wrong time,” Serenko said of the Afghan refugees who have been seeking asylum recently.

Ali Akbarzadeh, 22, who was turned down for asylum and deported, said Russian authorities showed little interest in Afghan requests for temporary refuge.

“It took a long time and they didn’t pay much attention to Afghans and their asylum applications,” he told RFE/RL.

Taliban Turbulence

Many Afghan asylum seekers in Russia have said they could face persecution, and even death, if they are sent back to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. RFE/RL could not verify individual claims.

Some of them worked for the deposed government or had relatives who did. The Taliban has allegedly targeted former members of the government for repression.

Hussein Navid and Habiba Nabizadi arrived in Pyatigorsk, another resort town in the Stavropol region, in September 2022 on a tourist visa with their two young children.

They soon applied for temporary asylum but had their request turned down. Nabizadi had worked for the National Directorate of Security (NDS), the intelligence agency of the former government of Afghanistan, and was a member of a prominent women’s organization.

In their application for asylum, her family said they feared for their lives if they went back, in part due to her previous work.

In many of the asylum rejections, Russian officials contend the Afghan citizens are exaggerating the threats to their lives at home and claim their real motivations for staying are economic.

Information about what has happened to Afghan refugees sent home by foreign countries since the Taliban takeover is hard to come by, but the overall lack of human rights and civil rights protections is well-documented.

Some Afghan refugees who worked with the former Afghan security forces have been detained by the Taliban following their deportation from Iran, but their subsequent fate is unknown.

The Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August 2021 after the United States pulled out its troops, resulting in the near collapse of government forces. The militants allegedly killed dozens of former Afghan officials, security forces, and people who worked with the international military contingent, despite their promise of a general amnesty.

They quickly imposed their strict interpretation of Islamic law, or Shari’a, on citizens, including severe restrictions on women and girls.

Their repressive rule, along with the economic collapse their seizure of power triggered, led to a mass exodus of citizens seeking refuge in neighboring countries and countries farther afield, including Russia.

Like many other countries, Russia officially considers the Taliban a terrorist organization. Nonetheless, Russian officials regularly hold meetings with the militants in Moscow as the Kremlin seeks to project global influence and power and undercut U.S. clout.

President Vladimir Putin announced in October 2021 that Russia would “move” toward excluding the Taliban from his government’s list of terrorist organizations, but Moscow has yet to do so.

Russia is far from alone in rejecting Afghans seeking refuge, and the numbers are much larger in some countries that border Afghanistan. Iran and Pakistan have been deporting large numbers of Afghans. Last week alone, Tehran forced around 20,000 undocumented Afghan refugees and migrants out of the country.

Turkey has also deported thousands of Afghans who have arrived via Iran.

Tajikistan, which shares a long border with Afghanistan, has also forced some of the thousands of Afghan refugees arriving there to return home, but official figures are not available.

Written by Todd Prince based on reporting by RFE/RL North Caucasus Service correspondent Andrei Krasno. RFE/RL’s Radio Farda contributed to this report.

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 Refugees and Migrants, Russia-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Asylum, Escape from the Taliban |

Fifth Positive Polio Case Emerges in Nangarhar, Raising Concerns for Eradication Efforts

18th June, 2023 · admin

8am: In continuation of the registration of positive polio cases in the country, the fifth instance of this disease has now been recorded in Nangarhar. Despite the earlier optimism expressed by various active health organizations about the opportunities for polio eradication in Afghanistan this year, the registration of new cases of this disease has raised concerns regarding the progress of the ongoing fight against it. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Health News 

  • Awareness Campaign for Crimean-Congo Haemorrhagic Fever Launched
Posted in Health News | Tags: Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever, Nangarhar, Polio |

Pak-Afghanistan rift widens after top Taliban minister trashes Durand line as border

18th June, 2023 · admin

Yaqoob

India Narrative: The Taliban administration’s Defence Minister Maulvi Muhammad Yaqub Mujahid has said that the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, called the Durand Line, is merely a ‘line’. Mujahid, the son of Mullah Muhammad Umar Mujahid – the founder of the Taliban, told TOLO News in Kabul in a video interview that Afghanistan will raise the matter with Islamabad when the people want it. He said the Taliban is not raising the issue of the border with Pakistan as people of Afghanistan are facing other problems. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Durand Line, Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, Taliban blowback, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan |

Tolo News in Dari – June 18, 2023

18th June, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Rashid Khan Returns To Afghanistan Squad for ODIs Against Bangladesh

18th June, 2023 · admin

Rashid Khan

Khaama: Rashid Khan has been added to Afghanistan’s team for the three-match ODI series against Bangladesh, which begins on July 5. Rashid Khan was rested for the one-off Test at Mirpur. Click here to read more (external link).

More Cricket News

  • Pakistan seek venue swap for World Cup matches vs Afghanistan, Australia
Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Cricket, Rashid Khan |

Sympathizers of the Taliban in Western Countries

18th June, 2023 · admin

Taliban fighters (file photo)

8am: Support for the Taliban on social media, especially from individuals who are dissatisfied with living under Taliban control, is a glaring hypocrisy. If someone believes that this group deserves support, they should first choose to experience life under its rule themselves. If they are unwilling to subject themselves and their own families to Taliban governance but still advocate for millions of citizens in the country, they are caught in a hypocritical contradiction, and their morally reprehensible actions must be exposed. Silence in the face of such unethical conduct will only perpetuate and exacerbate this phenomenon, leading society deeper into misery. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Opinion/Editorial, Taliban | Tags: Hypocrite Taliban Supporter |

Selective WhatsApp ban on hardliners hits Taliban’s functioning in Afghanistan

18th June, 2023 · admin

WION: The ban has affected the Taliban men who relied on WhatsApp’s voice message feature, with which they could send messages and listen to the verbal instructions from their commanders with the press of a button. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Science and Technology, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |
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