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  • National Resistance Front Claims Killing Two Taliban Fighters in Baghlan May 2, 2026
  • Painful Account of Ethnic Discrimination: Amiri Says His Father Was Removed from Operating Room Because He Is Hazara May 2, 2026
  • Taliban Members Criticise Leader, Say He Acts As Prophet May 2, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – May 2, 2026 May 2, 2026
  • Taliban Seize More Than 2,500 Hectares of Land in Khost May 2, 2026
  • Women in Badghis report rising deaths amidst lack of maternal care May 2, 2026
  • Afghanistan’s wushu team to compete in Asian championships in Japan May 2, 2026
  • Border clashes leave 136,000 cut off for weeks in eastern Afghanistan, ICRC says May 1, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – May 1, 2026 May 1, 2026
  • Karzai warns continued ban on girls’ education will deepen Afghanistan’s foreign dependence April 30, 2026

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Taliban Arrest Chinese Nationals for Allegedly Smuggling Afghan Lithium

22nd January, 2023 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
January 22, 2023

ISLAMABAD — Taliban authorities in Afghanistan have arrested five men, including two Chinese nationals, for allegedly trying to smuggle an estimated 1,000 metric tons of lithium-bearing rocks out of the country.

The arrests and the seizure of the rocks were made in the eastern Afghan border city of Jalalabad.

The Chinese nationals and their Afghan collaborators were planning to illegally transport the “precious stones” to China via Pakistan, said Taliban intelligence officials in comments aired Sunday by Afghan television channels.

Mohammad Rasool Aqab, a senior official at the Afghan Ministry of Mines and Petroleum, estimated the rocks “contained up to 30% of lithium.” They were “secretly” extracted from Nuristan and Kunar, two of the several Afghan provinces along the border with Pakistan, he added.

The Islamist rulers have banned extraction and sale of lithium since reclaiming power in Afghanistan in August 2021 after all U.S. and NATO troops withdrew from the country.

Afghanistan reportedly sits on an estimated $1 trillion worth of rare earth minerals, including huge deposits of lithium, but decades of war have prevented the development of Afghan mining.

Lithium is a key component in rechargeable batteries and it is used in clean technologies to tackle climate change, pushing global demand for the metal to soaring levels.

The Taliban government has not yet been formally recognized by the world over human rights concerns, particularly its restrictions on women’s access to work and education.

The United States and the Western nations at large imposed economic sanctions on Afghanistan immediately after the Taliban took control.

The Islamist group has increased coal exports to Pakistan in recent months, helping them generate much-needed revenues to fund Afghan budgetary needs and pay public sector employee salaries.

Posted in China-Afghanistan Relations, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: Lithium, Natural Resources, smuggling |

Taliban Arrest Civilian in Paktika Whose Brother Posted Critical Content on Facebook

21st January, 2023 · admin

8am: According to local sources, after this Facebook post, the Taliban arrested Ayaz Bacha, the brother of Mohammad Muqtasad, in Yusuf Khel district of Paktika province. It should be mentioned that the Taliban recently arrested a poet in Paktika for writing a critical poem. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Censorship, Crime and Punishment, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Freedom of Speech, Life under Taliban rule, Paktika |

Tolo News in Dari – January 21, 2023

21st January, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

US covertly supporting Armed Groups in Afghanistan: Russia

21st January, 2023 · admin

Kabulov

Khaama: The US has been reaching out to armed groups that oppose the current Afghan government and secretly financing them, as per Russia’s Presidential envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, media reports said. He also said that “the United States is contacting armed opposition in Afghanistan and covertly sponsoring Islamic State, who are aimed at undermining not only the stability of our Central Asian partners but also the security of Russia.” Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Kabulov says US is using Afghanistan’s frozen reserves as a tool ‘to blackmail Kabul’
Posted in ISIS/DAESH, Russia-Afghanistan Relations, Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Destabilization of Central Asia, US aiding ISIS |

Absence of Female Specialists: The Health Sector is “Paralyzed” in Ghor

21st January, 2023 · admin

8am: The shortage of medicines and the lack of doctors, particularly gynecologists, are causing concern among citizens in Ghor. Complainants said that only two female doctors are available in the central hospital of Firuzkoh city. Residents also claim that the lack of a gynecologist has made women feel uncomfortable, as they are not receiving the necessary health services. The authorities in Ghor have confirmed that only two female specialists are available, but due to the high demand, they are unable to provide service to all patients. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Health News | Tags: Ghor, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban government failure |

Pakistan Taliban Kill 3 Police Officers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

20th January, 2023 · admin

Khaama: Local authorities have reported that militants attacked a police outpost using in northeastern Pakistan, killing three security personnel on Thursday evening. The terror attack took place in the Khyber district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan late yesterday evening. Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, claimed the responsibility for the deadly attack, resulting in the death of three security force members. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Pakistan seeks Afghan Taliban cooperation in countering terrorism
Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Durand Line, Pashtuns in Pakistan, Taliban blowback, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan |

Tolo News in Dari – January 20, 2023

20th January, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Almost 30,000 Afghan refugees return from Iran in last 3 weeks

20th January, 2023 · admin

Ariana: The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation (MoRR) says in the last three weeks, more than 12,500 people entered Afghanistan through the Islam Qala border and nearly 16,000 Afghan migrants entered Afghanistan through the Nimroz border. According to MoRR, most of the returnees went to Iran illegally and were without their families. Many were also deported from Iran. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Americans can sponsor refugees directly under new program
Posted in Iran-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants |

Afghan Journalists Navigate a Changed Landscape

20th January, 2023 · admin

Roshan Noorzai
VOA News
January 19, 2023

WASHINGTON — From regulations on what can be covered to rules on where women can work, journalists say it is increasingly difficult to report in Afghanistan.

Restrictions on media “increased in the past year,” said Dawood Mubarak Oglu, a reporter who covers security and politics for the independent media group Salam Watandar Network.

Oglu told Voice of America it is hard to cover his reporting beat because the Taliban “don’t let journalists cover security issues, such as explosions and suicide attacks.”

“One can only report what the Taliban want to be covered,” the Kabul-based reporter said. “We have to wait for the government statements.”

When the Taliban seized power in August 2021, they said the media would be “free and independent.”

But a month later, new rules for media were imposed that watchdogs and journalists say amount to censorship.

Additionally, the United Nations recorded more than 200 violations against journalists in Afghanistan in 2022, including arbitrary arrest, ill-treatment, threats and intimidation.

Against that backdrop Oglu said, journalists in Afghanistan are “suffering from low morale.”

“We don’t feel safe anymore,” he told VOA.

Beh Lih Yi, the Asia program coordinator at the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, told VOA that media freedom in Afghanistan “has gone from bad to worse.”

The Taliban’s return had a “devastating effect” on media who are “struggling to survive,” she said.

Scores of radio and TV stations have ceased operating, with some estimates that more than 6,000 journalists are no longer able to work.

Some, like Kabul-based Maryam Hotak, face the double pressure of being a journalist and a woman.

Hotak worked for eight years with two local radio stations – Arakozia and Killid – as well as at the Chinese state media CCTV. But she lost her job at the latter earlier in January, when CCTV failed to renew her contract.

“It has become impossible for women to work as journalists in Afghanistan,” said Hotak.

The journalist said she had a contract with the Beijing operation, which has expanded its network in several countries including Afghanistan in recent years.

Hotak would send her reports to an editor in Afghanistan but, she says, that editor told her that a manager in China had said her reports were negative and that she “should be filing positive reports.”

“I told them that the situation is like that. Is it a positive news story if women are not going to school? Women cannot work and have to stay at home,” Hotak said. “Can I say that they are happy? I can’t. How can they be happy? And, how can I report it in a positive way.”

Taliban regulations on women already make it hard to work, she said.

“The Taliban don’t want to be interviewed by women journalists. Women are not allowed to attend press conferences. They are forced to wear masks on air,” Hotak said.

She added that women are not allowed to enter government buildings without mahram, a close male relative.

“I was stopped many times by the Taliban at the gates of the government organizations. They told me, ‘We will not allow you if there is no mahram with you.’”

Hotak said she wanted to work with a nongovernmental organization, but the Taliban banned women from working in that field. So now she stays at home with her mother and sister, who lost their government jobs after the takeover.

“I don’t have any right in this country. I can’t go to school, to university, and I am not allowed to work,” Hotak said. “I am not seen as a human being, Therefore, I don’t see any reason to stay in this country.”

The Taliban have imposed repressive measures on women in Afghanistan, including banning them from work, secondary and university education, and unaccompanied long-distance travel.

VOA’s request for comment from the Taliban sent via messaging app received no response.

Oglu is also concerned about his future – and that of his chosen profession.

“I am concerned about media. I am concerned about my colleagues, and I am concerned about journalism in the country,” he said.

The reporter said family and friends have suggested he move to Iran, but for the moment, he has declined.

“Until now, I kept my grounds, but I don’t know about the future,” he said.

This story originated in VOA’s Afghan service.

Posted in Afghan Women, Censorship, Economic News, Media | Tags: Afghan Journalists, censorship, Freedom of Speech, Life under Taliban rule, Press Freedom |

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 |
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