Rising Suicide Rates Among Women in Afghanistan: Two Tragic Deaths in Kapisa and Faryab Provinces
8am: According to local sources, two women have hanged themselves in the provinces of Kapisa and Faryab. It should be noted that since the beginning of the Taliban’s renewed rule in the country, suicide rates have increased. Poverty, unemployment, family violence, and strict Taliban restrictions are among the reasons for such events. Click here to read more (external link).
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MoPH: Nearly 3,500 Covid-19 Cases Reported in April
Tolo News: The Ministry of Public Health said that in April there have been almost 3,500 cases of Covid-19 reported in the country. According to the ministry, the process of vaccination against Covid-19 will start in several provinces of the country in the next few days. “In last month we also had a campaign of Covid-19 vaccination in 13 provinces, and we will have a booster dose campaign in May,” said Sharaft Zaman Amirkhil, spokesman for the Public Health Ministry. Click here to read more (external link).
Afghanistan national football team gets new head coach
Ariana: Abdullah Al Mutairi, from Kuwait, has been appointed as the new national football team head coach, after Anoush Dastgir was sacked due to the team’s poor performance. The Kuwaiti, will be tasked with finding new talent among local players and Afghans playing for foreign teams in order to form his national team. Click here to read more (external link).
The tour operators offering holidays to Afghanistan
Financial Times: Despite security risks and the ongoing humanitarian crisis, a growing number of tourists are visiting the country “It is disturbing for us to see western travel vloggers roam freely about the country while Afghan women are banned from public parks, schools and universities,” says Azizzada. “Not to mention that Afghan journalists as well as their fellow Afghan vloggers are being arbitrarily jailed, beaten and punished by the Taliban. Instead . . . anyone travelling to Afghanistan ought to speak with Afghans who have been on the receiving end of the Taliban’s cruel rule.” Click here to read more (external link).
Tolo News in Dari – April 27, 2023
UN Security Council Set to Vote Against Taliban Bans on Women and Girls
Ayaz Gul
VOA News
April 27, 2023
ISLAMABAD — The United Nations Security Council is set to vote Thursday to demand Afghanistan’s Taliban leadership swiftly reverse their restrictions on women’s access to education and work and to condemn a recent ban on U.N. local female staff.
The draft resolution, seen by VOA, expresses “deep concern at the increasing erosion of respect for the human rights and fundamental freedoms of women and girls in Afghanistan by the Taliban.”
The United Arab Emirates and Japan jointly drafted the resolution, with diplomats expecting it to be adopted by the 15-member council.
The resolution being put to the vote would describe the ban on female Afghan staff as “unprecedented” in the history of the United Nations, saying it “undermines human rights and humanitarian principles.” It would reaffirm “the indispensable role of women in Afghan society.”
The ban on female U.N. staff and women working for nongovernmental organizations in Afghanistan “will negatively and severely impact” U.N. operations in the country, including the delivery of life-saving aid and basic services
Thursday’s vote will come as U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres plans to host a meeting behind closed doors of envoys on Afghanistan from countries around the world in Doha, Qatar May 1-2 to discuss what should be done in the wake of the intensifying Taliban crackdown on women.
The Taliban reclaimed power in August 2021 as the United States and NATO troops withdrew from the country after almost two decades of involvement in the Afghan war.
The reclusive chief of the fundamentalist Taliban authorities, Hibatullah Akhundzada, has since imposed his strict interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, to govern strife-torn Afghanistan. He has banned girls’ education beyond the sixth grade and barred most Afghan women from public life and work across the country.
Akhundzada last week again dismissed international calls for easing curbs on women’s freedom, saying he would not allow any external interference in his Islamic governance, come what may.
“It is the success and good fortune of the Afghan nation that Allah has blessed them with an Islamic Sharia system,” Akhundzada told worshippers in a mosque in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar on Friday.
“I have promised Allah that so long as I am alive, not a single law of infidelity will find a place in Afghanistan,” the reclusive Taliban chief said in his defiant speech that marked the start of the three-day annual Muslim festival of Eid al-Fitr.
Other countries have refused to recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s legitimate rulers, citing bans on women’s education and work, among other human rights concerns.
Earlier this month, U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, while sharing details of the planned Doha meeting, suggested recognition would also be on the agenda.
“We hope that we will find those baby steps to put us back on the pathway to recognition [of the Taliban], a principled recognition; in other words, there are conditions,” Mohammed told a seminar at Princeton University.
“Is it possible? I don’t know. That discussion has to happen. The Taliban clearly want recognition, and that’s the leverage we have,” she said.
The United States has said that any discussion of recognition of the Taliban at next week’s U.N.-hosted meeting in Doha “would be unacceptable” for Washington.
State Department spokesman Vedant Patel reiterated on Wednesday that the Taliban’s “human rights abuses towards women and girls…continues to be one of the key roadblocks to their self-proclaimed desire for international recognition.”
The draft resolution to be put forward on Thursday would also recognize and stress the need to address “the dire economic and humanitarian situation” facing Afghanistan, including through efforts to restore the country’s banking and financial systems.
The United States and other Western nations froze more than $9 billion in Afghan central bank foreign reserves after the Taliban takeover. Washington has since transferred a portion of the frozen reserves to a trust fund in Switzerland, strictly to be used for relief efforts.
Afghanistan is listed as one of the biggest humanitarian emergencies in the world, where U.N. estimates 6 million people are one step from faminelike conditions. The U.N. says more than 28 million Afghans, or two-thirds of the population, need assistance after years of war and natural calamities.
Margaret Basheer contributed to this report.
Update: Security Council to Taliban: Reverse Restrictions on Afghan Women, Girls
Saur 7: Fall of Daoud Khan Remembered

Daoud Khan
Tolo News: Thursday, April 27, 2023, is the 45th anniversary of the collapse of the first Afghan president Sardar Mohammad Daoud Khan. The People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan led a coup against Daoud Khan’s government. On the same day, after five years of his presidency, Daoud Khan and 18 of his family members were killed, and Noor Mohammad Taraki, head if the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan, came to power. Click here to read more (external link).
More than 290 injured in Kandahar accidents over Eid: officials
Ariana: Kandahar officials say more than 290 people were injured in traffic accidents over Eid ul-Fitr in the province. According to officials, 135 traffic accidents occurred over the three-day Eid holidays. A number of injured people blamed the accidents on reckless drivers. Click here to read more (external link).
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Family Cannot Afford Medical Solution for Teenager With Gender Issues
Tolo News: After an examination, a sixteen-year-old compelled to publicly identify as a girl in Nangarhar’s Chaparhar district would like to proceed as a boy in the future, but the family said that they cannot afford the cost of the treatment. Doctors said that an operation will cost 600,000 Afghani. Obaid Rahman Stanikzai, a doctor, said the youth had male organs, including a prostate. Nearly five years ago, in a separate case in Rodat district in Nangarhar, a young person also originally named Adela identified as a boy after surgery and was named Abdul Rahman. Click here to read more (externa link).
