Khaama: At least 220 people were injured due to road accidents during the three days of Eid-ul-FItr in western Herat Province, the official said. Over Eid, there were twice as many injuries in road accidents as usual. Motorcycle accidents were the leading cause of injury. According to the officials, the reason for accidents could be speed driving, damaged roads, and not following traffic rules. Click here to read more (external link).
Afghanistan: How Australia covered up alleged war crimes of SAS ‘heroes’
Middle East Eye: Justice delayed is justice denied, so goes the saying. In the case of alleged Australian war crimes committed in Afghanistan, it’s not as simple as red tape or the oft-tepid pace of bureaucracy. Rather it is the result of a campaign of politically expedient hero-worship, of command-shirking responsibility and investigators rubber-stamping a litany of cover-ups. In March, 41-year-old former Special Air Service (SAS) trooper, Oliver Schulz, was formally charged with the war crime of murder, a historic first in Australia. No serving or retired military veteran has faced a war crime charge – and in a civilian court no less. It stems from the 2012 shooting of a young farmer, Dad Mohammad, in Uruzgan Province. Click here to read more (external link).
Tolo News in Dari – April 24, 2023
Afghan Delegation to Meet in Vienna to Discuss Afghanistan

Massoud
Khaama: The second Vienna meeting will be held on Monday, April 24, to discuss the current situation in Afghanistan. According to a statement released by the Resistance Front, there would be 30 participants, including representatives of political movements, civil activists, former government officials, former MPs, religious scholars, diplomats, and journalists. Meanwhile, the leader of the Resistance Front, Ahmad Masoud, will attend a meeting in support of human rights on the sideline of the conference. Click here to read more (external link).
U.S. taxpayers helping fund Afghanistan’s Taliban? Aid workers say they’re forced “to serve the Taliban first”

Taliban militants dancing (file photo)
CBS News: “We have to serve the families of the Taliban police commanders, governors and other people who they ask us to serve specifically,” one aid worker at UNHCR told CBS News on the condition of anonymity. “Once a Taliban governor told one of our subcontracted aid agencies that 15% of the aid must go toward his guards and other Taliban personnel, and it is now a norm to serve the Taliban first and then serve the ordinary civilians.” Click here to read more (external link).
4.2 Magnitude Earthquake Hit Afghanistan’s Faizabad
Khaama: An earthquake of 4.2 magnitudes hit 32 km north of Faizabad city of Badakhshan province of Afghanistan on Sunday. The earthquake of 4.2 magnitudes occurred at 10:40 pm local time, 10km depth on Sunday with the epicentre of Raghistan, Badakhshan province of Afghanistan, the Indian National Center for Seismology reported. No causalities have been reported so far. Click here to read more (external link).
ISIS Using Afghanistan As Terror Base: Leaked Pentagon Documents

Khaama: Afghanistan has become a significant coordination hub for the Islamic State as the terrorist organization plans attacks across Europe and Asia and engages in “aspirational plotting” against the U.S., a leaked Pentagon document revealed. According to a classified Pentagon assessment that portrays the threat as a rising security concern, less than two years after President Biden withdrew U.S. personnel from Afghanistan, the country has developed into a significant coordination hub for the Islamic State as the terrorist organization plans attacks across Europe and Asia and engages in “aspirational plotting” against the United States, Washington Post reported. Click here to read more (external link).
Related
Tolo News in Dari – April 23, 2023
9 Afghans jailed, fined for migrant smuggling
Ariana: A French court has jailed four Afghans and given shorter sentences to five others as part of a crackdown on the smuggling of migrants across the English Channel. In 2021, the group was found guilty of smuggling 53 people, primarily Vietnamese and Afghan immigrants, into the UK aboard dinghies. Click here to read more (external link).
Pakistan Pashtuns Have Doubts About New Military Offensive Against Islamist Radicals
Pir Zubair Shah
VOA News
April 23, 2023
WASHINGTON — Pakistan is bracing for a new military offensive that is expected to target militants in the northwest as ethnic Pashtuns in the area say they are still looking for accountability for the army’s last offensives in the region, in 2014 and 2017.
The country’s national security committee, comprising top civilian and military leaders, has not said when the operation will start. When announcing it earlier this month, the committee described it as a nationwide anti-militant operation to halt a rise in attacks on security forces by the Pakistani Taliban and other extremist groups.
Pakistan’s government has said that previous operations led to a drop in terrorist attacks; however, Pashtun civil society members and peace activists say it came at a steep cost to many innocent people.
“The generals and those involved in bringing back armed men [militants] to the area haven’t been arrested and have not [been] held accountable. … We will oppose any [new] operation,” an elected member from South Waziristan, Ali Wazir, told Parliament on April 7 after the government disclosed its intentions for another offensive.
Rights activists say previous military-led operations in their region killed tens of thousands, displaced millions, destroyed towns and market centers, and led to the creation of a harsh security law that gives the armed forces sweeping powers in the whole province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, including the former federally administered tribal areas.
Wazir is a household name in Pakistan for his opposition to extrajudicial killings, forced disappearances, illegal detentions, landmines and the Taliban’s shadow rule in the Pashtun region. He was in jail for half of his 60-month term in Parliament, purportedly for his opposition to Pakistan’s former chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa.
Earlier this month, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif responded to Wazir’s opposition by saying he would work to assuage local fears over the operation.
“I want to tell members from Waziristan that their concerns will be heard, and they will be answered,” the prime minister said on the floor of the lower house.
Defense Minister Khawaja Mohammad Asif also supported the stance of the Waziristan members of Parliament and told the house that “they [MPs] are right in saying that those people [involved in talks with militants] should be reckoned with.”
News spreads fear
Leaders and activists of the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM), a nonviolent Indigenous organization with serious reservations about the army’s series of operations, are skeptical of the motive and timing of the announcement of the new operation, which could come during an election year and would be the military’s first offensive since the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO troops from Afghanistan.
“The announcement of yet another military operation has indeed spread fear among locals because what they saw in the past operations was they were the ones who suffered the most,” said Idris Bacha, a civil rights activist from Swat and the leader of a local movement, the People’s Resistance Against Militancy.
“Someone needs to tell us, what did they achieve in the previous campaigns? 80,000 people have been killed, whole villages destroyed, and their bazaars lay in ruins. They don’t want to see that happen again,” Bacha told VOA.
Marvin Weinbaum, a longtime regional analyst with the Washington-based think tank Middle East Institute, shares Bacha’s concerns.
“I am very skeptical that there will be anything like a campaign they had in 2014, when they pushed them out of North and South Waziristan. I am skeptical of that in part because [of] the feelings in the tribal areas where they suffered terribly when that campaign was on its way. Many, many thousands were evicted from their homes. They became refugees.”
Other activists have gone further, saying they will actively oppose a military campaign.
“We are united against another war in our area. The military can force us to leave our houses again, but we won’t leave them on our own will,” South Waziristan writer and social activist Shehrayar Mehsud told VOA in a Twitter Spaces conversation.
Pakistan economy
Others see a financial benefit in launching such an operation as Pakistan waits for another major International Monetary Fund bailout loan.
“We have said it before that in the past whenever Pakistan needed money, they would launch an operation in Pashtun areas to get funds from abroad,” said Mir Kalam Wazir, a former provincial legislator and PTM supporter from North Waziristan.
“Looks like it’s the same this time, too. With Pakistan’s difficult economic situation, they need funds, especially from the U.S.,” Wazir continued.
The U.S. gave Pakistan billions of dollars during the height of the war on terrorism, but aid dropped off sharply during the Trump administration. Last year, the total reported U.S. aid to Pakistan was around $150 million.
That drop in aid and the departure of foreign troops from Afghanistan have led some to question whether Islamabad has the capacity to carry out an offensive while its economy is under severe strain.
Pakistan hopes the suspended IMF bailout package will resume so it can avoid defaulting on its debt obligations. The IMF has stalled its $6.5 billion program since November, while a bruising political battle rages between the sitting coalition government and former Prime Minister Imran Khan.
“We are talking of a campaign which is very expensive, at a time when Pakistan is struggling to read its bills, particularly its debt obligations,” Weinbaum told VOA.
