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  • Flood death toll in Afghanistan rises to 51 April 2, 2026
  • Kandahari Hat: From Style Choice to Forced Attire in Kabul April 2, 2026
  • UN review finds Taliban policies violate women’s rights convention April 2, 2026
  • Bennett Reports 471 Civilian Casualties from Unexploded Ordnance in Afghanistan Last Year April 2, 2026
  • Senior Officials Sent To China For Talks With Taliban, Says Pakistan April 2, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 2, 2026 April 2, 2026
  • 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

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Muzzled in Afghanistan, Activists Protest Abroad

20th January, 2023 · admin

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
February 19, 2023

From Lafayette Park in front of the White House to the streets of London, Toronto and many other cities around the world, activists have been staging small protests to condemn the Taliban’s repressive policies against women in Afghanistan and call for a stronger international response.

While they attract a relatively small number of participants, the protests have increased in frequency over the last year, largely in response to growing Taliban restrictions on women inside Afghanistan.

On January 14, fewer than 100 protesters showed up at Farragut Square Park in Washington to chant slogans against the Taliban’s recent edict banning universities and work for Afghan girls and women. On the same day, about three dozen protesters gathered in heavy rain in Los Angeles, making similar demands.

“In Los Angeles, we called for an end to the gender apartheid instilled by the Taliban,” Arash Azizada, an Afghan American community organizer, told VOA.

The protests take place as women and civil society activists inside Afghanistan have gone silent under Taliban rule.

‘We want to be their voices’

Human rights groups accuse Taliban authorities of forcefully banning protests, detaining and torturing activists, and censoring the media. The Taliban strongly reject the allegations and instead claim they have freed the country from a U.S. invasion.

The protesters outside Afghanistan say they show solidarity with Afghan women whose rights are being crushed under the Taliban’s undemocratic rule.

“We want to be their voices. We want to be their bridge to the world,” said Asila Wardak, a former Afghan diplomat and now a fellow at Harvard University who participated in several protests in the U.S.

The Afghan protesters are part of a widespread global chorus that demands the Taliban immediately reverse restrictions imposed on women’s work and education in Afghanistan.

But the Taliban have remained defiant, giving no clarity about when or whether the will be lifted.

“Anti-government protests outside the country that the government controls (e.g., anti-Iranian government protests that take place in Washington) do not seem to have much impact in the country that the protests concern,” Thomas Carothers of the Global Protest Tracker at the Carnegie Endowment told VOA by email.

“Repressive governments are usually able to control news of such events,” he said.

While U.S. and European officials have often voiced support for Afghan women and have imposed travel and economic sanctions on Taliban leaders and institutions, protesters say the international community should undertake meaningful action to dissuade and disable the Taliban from depriving millions of women of their basic rights.

“Just issuing statements of solidarity with Afghan women is not enough,” said Wardak. “The international community should facilitate opportunities for Afghan women to directly engage the Taliban and demand accountability.”

Azizzada, an activist in Los Angeles, said a meaningful response to the Taliban’s perceived misogyny would be for the U.S. and its Western allies to offer more asylum and educational opportunities for Afghans.

“If Afghan girls cannot learn in Afghanistan, they should be allowed to do so in the United States or elsewhere,” Azizzada said.

Local voices

Since the Taliban seized power in August 2021, more than 150,000 Afghans, among them many women leaders and activists, have been evacuated or given asylum in the U.S., Canada and European countries.

Many evacuees have engaged in high-profile advocacy for change in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan. Some activists have received prestigious awards and fellowships at elite universities, giving them a bully pulpit from which to write for and appear in prominent media outlets.

Now there are concerns that the activists in the Western countries are given too much attention at the cost of women inside Afghanistan.

“Efforts outside of Afghanistan should complement the activism of those inside the country and not hijack the narrative and present unrealistic solutions,” said Obaidullah Baheer, a Kabul analyst.

Even while women are not allowed to advocate for their rights inside Afghanistan, Baheer said, “it should not mean that their voices be ignored.”

That Afghan women have continued to suffer under the Taliban, despite protests and advocacy outside Afghanistan, is not disputed by some prominent activists.

“I believe that protests have impacts on the situation,” Zarifa Ghafari, a former Afghan official who now advocates for Afghan women’s rights from Germany, told VOA. “But I do not have confidence in the scattered gatherings by Afghans, and you have not seen any positive result over the past one and one-half years.”

Taliban officials have largely ignored the Afghan protests abroad or labeled the protesters as Western puppets.

Inside Afghanistan, however, nearly all Afghans have rated their lives as “suffering,” and a majority have said that women are disrespected under the Taliban, according to a recent Pew survey.

Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Afghan-American community, Protest |

Armed Thieves Robbed Gold Jewelry Store in Kapisa Using Taliban Military Vehicle

19th January, 2023 · admin

8am: This incident took place on Wednesday evening in Shirkhan Khel village, Kohistan’s first district. Armed robberies have increased in regions north of Kabul in the past few months, with most robberies are carried out using the Taliban’s title, outfits and military equipment. Click here to read more (external link).

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

Tolo News in Dari – January 19, 2023

19th January, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Blast Rocks Afghanistan’s Northern Takhar Province

19th January, 2023 · admin

8am: Sources said a blast occurred outside the Taliban governor’s office in Takhar province. No details about the nature of the explosion and casualty toll were immediately available. Local media outlets, however, reported that the explosion was caused by a magnetic improvised explosive device (IED) planted in a civilian Corolla Toyota vehicle. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Security, Taliban | Tags: Attacks on Taliban, Takhar, Taliban Security Failure |

Afghanistan’s Winter Turned Deadly, Killing 78 People Across the Country

19th January, 2023 · admin

Khaama: Taliban authorities reported on Thursday that 78 people have died over the last couple of days during Afghanistan’s harsh winter, worsening the humanitarian crisis in the country. Amid the dire economic situation, the harsh winter has deepened the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. As a result of extremely cold weather, 78 people have died across the country over the last week according to Shafiullah Rahimi, a Taliban Spokesperson for the Ministry of Natural Disaster Management. Some 75,0000 livestock have also died, and more will die in the coming days he added. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Environmental News | Tags: Weather |

Afghanistan’s cricket team under fire as players meet with Taliban and say “politics” shouldn’t stop sports

19th January, 2023 · admin

CBS News: The national cricket team’s players and board members have met on multiple occasions with Taliban leaders, including the head of the notorious Haqqani network, and posed for photos with them. Sirajuddin Haqqani is the current acting Minister of the Interior under the Taliban regime. The FBI has offered $10 million to anyone who can provide information that leads to his arrest.  The U.S. says his Haqqani network was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Afghans and dozens of American forces, many of them in suicide attacks, across Afghanistan during the two-decade war.  Holding meetings with such figures has eroded support for even Afghanistan’s most beloved cricketers. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News, Afghan Women, Haqqani Network, Political News, Taliban | Tags: Cricket, Sirajuddin Haqqani |

Kabul’s notorious drug ‘den’ cleared of addicts: officials

19th January, 2023 · admin

Ariana: Pul-e-Sokhta, in the west of Kabul, has for more than 20 years been the hub for drug addicts and their dealers in the city, but this week, the area was cleared by police, Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) [Taliban] officials said. Khaled Zadran, Kabul Police Command spokesman, said that Pul-e- Sokhta has been completely cleared of drug addicts and that those rounded up have been sent to rehabilitation centers. The addicts mostly lived under a bridge over the Kabul River. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Drugs, Health News | Tags: Drug Addiction, Kabul |

UN Envoy Visits Afghanistan, Discusses Bans on Women

19th January, 2023 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
January 18, 2023

ISLAMABAD — A top U.N. diplomat held talks with the foreign minister of the ruling Taliban in Afghanistan to convey international concern about restrictions they have placed on women’s access to work, education and public life.

Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, the highest-ranking woman in the world body, arrived overnight in the capital, Kabul, at the head of a high-level U.N. delegation.

Her visit comes nearly a month after the Islamist Taliban tightened their already sweeping crackdown on Afghan women, ordering most female NGO staff to stop work until further notice and barring girls from attending universities. The latest curbs sparked global outrage and calls for immediately reversing them.

Mohammed told Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi in the meeting Wednesday that the purpose of her visit was aimed at “witnessing the situation up close” and delivering the international community’s message about women’s access to education and work, according to Taliban officials.

Muttaqi in turn complained about a lack of cooperation from the international community to address concerns such as granting recognition to his government and removing sanctions on the banking sector and Taliban leaders, saying they were causing problems for ordinary Afghans.

“Traders are faced with extreme difficulties and they are unable to transfer funds to even import food items,” he said in his remarks at the meeting, captured on camera and released by the Taliban.

“If 1 million [girl] students are without education here, but what about those 9 million students, including boys and girls, who are going to schools?” Muttaqi asked. “They are also humans and need assistance to overcome issues facing them.”

The Taliban have banned teenage girls from attending school beyond grade six.

“Women are engaged in educational and health sectors in significant numbers, whereas those who used to work in government offices are paid salaries at home; the number of female inmates has reduced considerably,” Taliban foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi said in a statement that quoted Muttaqi as telling the U.N. delegation.

The foreign minister recounted that his government had established peace in Afghanistan on its own returning to power and “narcotics cultivation has dropped to zero,” noting the country used to be the biggest drug producer in the world before the Taliban takeover in August 2021.

“Ms. Mohammed … pledged to convey the realities as witnessed to the international community, taking firm steps for continued assistance to Afghanistan,” Balkhi said.

A U.N. report published in November acknowledged that the Taliban had imposed a strict ban on opium production in April 2022 but said the ban had been ineffective and that the world body estimated that opium production increased by 32% last year.

Muttaqi was also quoted as telling the U.N. team that the number of drug addicts in Afghanistan had risen to around four million before the Taliban takeover. “They are now being treated in 83 therapy centers” across the country, but these efforts have not been acknowledged by the world nor has there been any assistance in return for these efforts, the foreign minister said.

Mohammed also met with U.N. staff, aid groups and Afghan women “to take stock of the situation, convey solidarity, and discuss ways to promote and protect women’s and girls’ rights,” deputy U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq said in New York.

In those talks, Mohammed “stressed the need to uphold human rights, especially for women and girls,” and was “encouraged by exemptions” to the ban on female aid workers, Haq said. The exemptions have allowed some work to restart in areas such as health care.

Mohammed was in Kabul as part of a series of meetings that had included stops in Turkey, Qatar and Pakistan to discuss the situation in Afghanistan with diplomats, Afghan diaspora and the Organization of the Islamic Conference.

The Taliban have defended the ban on NGOs, claiming female workers were not adhering to Islamic dress codes and other Shariah principles in violation of official directives. The ban has prompted major foreign aid groups to suspend operations in Afghanistan, though some said this week they had resumed health and other programs where the Taliban have allowed women to work.

The Taliban seized power 17 months ago when U.S.-led foreign troops withdrew from the country after 20 years of war with the then-insurgent Taliban.

Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban, UN-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Taliban war on women |

The Taliban appear to be making kill lists

18th January, 2023 · admin

The Washington Examiner: While the world fumes about the far-reaching impacts of Taliban misogyny, Afghanistan’s leaders have quietly begun assembling apparent kill lists of their remaining enemies. Media reports indicate that the Taliban have asked village elders and lawyers in Kabul and several northern provinces to create lists of those who worked with the former Afghan National Army or who supported foreigners prior to the Taliban’s takeover of the country. In Panjshir, where Taliban forces are actively engaged in military operations against the National Resistance Front, the Taliban are said to be searching for former government soldiers at checkpoints. In one district, Talibs have allegedly arrested several residents. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Security, Taliban | Tags: Revenge killings, Taliban Amnesty Violation, War Crime |

Tolo News in Dari – January 18, 2023

18th January, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |
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