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Pakistan Questions Anti-Terror Pledges by Afghanistan’s Taliban

1st December, 2022 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
December 1, 2022

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan warned Thursday that cross-border terrorism emanating from Afghanistan “is both alarming and dangerous” for regional peace, calling on the neighboring country’s ruling Taliban to honor their anti-terror pledges.

Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah issued the warning amid a new wave of deadly terrorist attacks in Pakistan that has claimed the lives of hundreds of people, mostly security forces.

Outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), known as the Pakistani Taliban, has claimed credit for plotting much of the violence. Leaders and commanders of the group, an offshoot and ally of the Afghan Taliban, have largely taken refuge in Afghanistan.

“If the TTP is claiming responsibility for terrorist activities in Pakistan, it should be a matter of serious concern for the government of Afghanistan because their soil is being used for terrorism,” Sanaullah told reporters in Islamabad.

“[The Taliban] have given assurances to the world that they would not allow the use of Afghanistan’s soil by terrorist outfits, and they should deliver on their pledges.”

The Afghan Taliban deny they allow TTP or any other group to use Afghan territory for plotting cross-border terrorist attacks, promising they will try for treason anyone found guilty of such crimes.

Suicide bombing

Sanaullah spoke a day after TTP claimed credit for a suicide bombing of a truck transporting policeman on their way to protect medical workers administering polio vaccines in southwestern Baluchistan province.

The blast in the provincial capital, Quetta, killed at least four people and wounded more than two dozen, mostly policemen.

TTP is listed as a global terrorist organization by the United States and the United Nations. It has carried out hundreds of suicide attacks and other terrorist strikes in Pakistan, killing tens of thousands of people since 2007 when the group emerged in volatile districts along the Afghan border.

Pakistan sustained years of counterterrorism military operations, which forced TTP members to flee to Afghanistan and establish sanctuaries there. But the return to power in Kabul of the Taliban in August 2021 has emboldened TTP members, and they enjoy greater operational freedom on the other side of the border, Pakistani officials maintain.

Sanaullah noted up to 7,000 combatants linked to the Pakistani Taliban and their families are currently sheltering on Afghan soil, saying the government is ready to talk with them to facilitate their repatriation if they agree to surrender and hand over their weapons in compliance with Pakistani laws.

TTP announces end to unilateral “cease-fire”

On Wednesday, the TTP said it was ending a unilateral “cease-fire” with the government and resuming attacks across Pakistan in retaliation for the government’s military operations against the group.

Pakistani officials rejected the claims as “lame excuses” and said the operations were launched to prevent TTP fighters from regrouping or reorganizing in the country.

The militant truce stemmed from several rounds of talks the Taliban government in Afghanistan recently brokered and hosted between Pakistani and TTP representatives.

Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Security, Taliban | Tags: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan |

Afghans Increasingly Marrying Off Young Daughters To Avoid Forced Unions With Taliban

1st December, 2022 · admin

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
Abubakar Siddique
December 1, 2022

In the 15 months since the Taliban took power, there has been a dramatic increase in early marriages of Afghan girls — a trend activists and human rights campaigners attribute to parents’ belief that securing a spouse for their girls is better than seeing them forced to marry members of the Taliban.

Marrying their girls off also provides some sense of security: fewer mouths to feed at a time when Afghan girls have been banned from attending school and face harassment as the country deals with a humanitarian crisis and economic ruin.

Khatira, a 12-year-old seventh-grader who used a pseudonym out of fear of retribution, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi her parents arranged her engagement to a much older man in her native western Ghor Province six months ago.

“I didn’t want to marry,” she said. “But my father warned me that if I refused to marry, the Taliban would force him to marry me to one of their fighters.”

Khatira was a brilliant student. She was top of her class and had big dreams for the future. She wanted to serve her community by becoming a doctor in the remote, impoverished province.

A marriage to Taliban fighters or officials — particularly elderly ones seeking second or third wives — was not something her family could bear to see.

“The Taliban policies shattered all our dreams,” Khatira said.

Firoza, 18, was in the 11th grade when the Taliban shut her school in Ghor, destroying her plans of entering a university. Soon her family married her off against her will.

“The wedding crushed all my dreams,” she said. “I faced immense pressure and had no option but to accept a forced marriage.”

Shukria Sherzai, a women’s rights activist in Ghor, says the cases of forced and underage marriages have increased exponentially since the Taliban seized power in August 2021.

She says that many families agree to early unions in the hope of sparing them from being forced to marry Taliban members. But even if the reasoning is based on securing a better life, the effect has been devastating to the family structure.

“Forced and underage marriages have resulted in violence and turmoil within families,” she told Radio Azadi.

International rights watchdogs have documented similar trends. “The rates of child, early, and forced marriage in Afghanistan are surging under Taliban rule,” noted a July report by Amnesty International.

Nicolette Waldman, a researcher for Amnesty International, says that the most common drivers of child, early, and forced marriage since the Taliban’s takeover include the economic and humanitarian crisis and lack of educational and professional prospects for women.

Many are not able to find alternatives to the Taliban. “Families are forcing women and girls to marry Taliban members, and Taliban members are forcing women and girls to marry them,” she said.

Waldman says that since seizing power, the Taliban has imposed a web of interrelated restrictions and prohibitions that has trapped Afghan women and girls. “These policies form a system of repression that discriminates against women and girls in Afghanistan in almost every aspect of their lives,” she said.

She says that the Taliban’s violations of the rights of women and girls are increasing month by month. “The group’s draconian policies are depriving millions of women and girls of the opportunity to lead safe, free, and fulfilling lives,” Waldman said.

Afghanistan is rife with speculation that the Taliban is contemplating a complete ban on women’s education, work, and mobility in a return to the policies imposed during the extremist group’s infamous first stint in power from 1996 to 2001.

A December 2021 decree by the Taliban’s supreme leader, Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada, about women’s rights was silent on women’s education and work. But it outlawed forced marriages by requiring women’s consent for marriage.

That requirement is apparently not being enforced.

Marziah Nurzai, a women’s rights activist in the western province of Farah, attributes the rise in forced and underage marriages to the Taliban’s decision to close girls’ schools. She told Radio Azadi that she witnessed one father marrying his daughter to a drug addict in exchange for a dowry worth some $2,500. Another one sold off his 10-year-old for more than $4,000 in cash.

“Think about what will happen to such girls in the future,” she said. “Since there is no hope for reopening schools, girls are losing hope and self-confidence.”

Many young girls across Afghanistan have already given up on the idea of a better future after being forced to marry.

Razia, a 22-year-old law student who spoke to Radio Azadi using a pseudonym, says she and her younger sister were forced to give up their university educations after the Taliban seized power. She says that once back in their native northern province of Kunduz, she had no chance of ever becoming a judge as she had planned.

Earlier this year, her father arranged for them to be engaged to relatives, fearing that Taliban fighters might ask for their hand in marriage. “I am not happy,” she told Radio Azadi of her now 2-month-old marriage. “I have no choice but to suffer silently in this traditional society.”

In Ghor, Khatira also sees no prospects of resuming her education. She recalls spending days learning new things at school, but is now struggling with despair and grief.

“Every new day is gloomier than the previous one,” she said.

Copyright (c) 2022. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Afghan Children, Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: child marriage, Forced marriage by Taliban, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban Rapists |

Why Did the Taliban Welcome This Woman to Afghanistan With Big Smiles?

1st December, 2022 · admin

Khar

VICE: Analysts say Pakistan made a power move by sending a female minister to talk shop with the all-men government of Afghanistan. Adam Weinstein, research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, told VICE World News, that he doesn’t think “women-led delegations significantly alter the Taliban’s view on women’s rights.”  “But they do uphold a norm, which is important,” he added. “Forcing the Taliban to meet with women leaders puts their hypocrisy on full display.” Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban |

Qatari Sheikhs Hunt Afghanistan’s Endangered Birds

1st December, 2022 · admin

8am: Taliban allows Qatari nationals to hunt Afghanistan’s endangered birds. Sources confirmed to Hasht-e Subh that on Thursday (December 1st), Arab sheikhs, using Taliban helicopters, visited Nimruz province and are hunting rare birds. It is reported that these Arab sheikhs are residents of Qatar and until last week they were busy hunting birds in the western parts of Afghanistan. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Arab-Afghan Relations, Corruption, Environmental News, Taliban | Tags: Bird Hunting, Corrupt Taliban, Endangered Species, Life under Taliban rule, Qatar-Afghanistan Relations |

Resistance Front Commander Allegedly Surrenders to Authorities in Afghanistan

1st December, 2022 · admin

Khaama: The [Taliban] state-run Bakhtar News Agency reported on Thursday, December 1, citing security sources in Panjshir province of northern Afghanistan that a National Resistance Front (NRF) commander relinquished to the new government. “Twelve rebels led by commander Baz Mohammad and his brothers Mohammad Arez and Nek Mohammad joined the Islamic Emirate,” Bakhtar reported quoting security officials in Panjshir province. The Ahmad Massoud-led NRF has yet to confirm and respond to the surrender of the NRF commander to the NRF’s opponent, the current administration in Afghanistan. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Afghanistan’s Massoud urges elections to create legitimate government
Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Security, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Ahmad Massoud, Panjshir |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – December 1, 2022

1st December, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Defend Ban on VOA, RFE/RL Broadcasts in Afghanistan

1st December, 2022 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
December 1, 2022

ISLAMABAD — The Islamist Taliban government has defended banning FM radio broadcasts from two U.S.-funded news media, including the Voice of America, in Afghanistan, alleging they were offending local laws.

The ban on VOA and Azadi Radio, an Afghan extension of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, or RFE/RL, went into effect Thursday, a day after the Taliban’s ministry of information and culture said it had received complaints about programing content but shared no specifics.

It is unclear whether the ban will apply to other international broadcasters that have used the same system for FM broadcasts in Afghanistan.

“Afghanistan has press laws and any network found repeatedly contravening these laws will have their privilege of reporting from and broadcasting within Afghanistan taken away,” Abdul Qahar Balkhi, the Taliban foreign ministry spokesman, said in his written comments to VOA.

“VOA and Azadi Radio failed to adhere to these laws, were found as repeat offenders, failed to show professionalism and were therefore shut down,” Balkhi asserted.

The two U.S. government-funded news organizations operate with journalistic independence and aim to provide comprehensive, balanced coverage.

VOA’s Afghan services broadcast 12 hours a day on 15 FM channels and two medium wave (MW) channels, with programming split between Pashto and Dari, reaching millions of listeners across impoverished Afghanistan, where radio remains a primary source of information.

The Taliban retook control of Afghanistan in August 2021, just days before American and NATO troops concluded their withdrawal from the country after 20 years of war with the then-insurgent Islamist group.

The Taliban have since implemented their harsh interpretation of Islamic law to govern the conflict-ridding country, restricting rights and freedoms.

The restrictions and financial hardships have forced dozens of private television channels, radio stations and print media reportedly to cease operation in Afghanistan, with thousands of journalists losing jobs. Hundreds of Afghan media personnel also have fled the country, fearing Taliban persecution.

France-based global media advocacy group Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, has reported that the country has lost 40% of its media outlets and 60% of its journalists since the Taliban takeover.

Dari and Pashto radio programs of VOA started broadcasting to Afghanistan in the1980s when the South Asian nation was being occupied by Soviet forces.

The local language broadcasts are widely respected as credible and reliable.

VOA also reaches a large Afghan audience via digital media. In March the Taliban stopped VOA’s Ashna TV news shows, which had been broadcast on Afghan National Television, Tolo News and Lamar for a decade, VOA Pashto reported.

Amnesty International said Thursday on Twitter that the Taliban’s seizure of power in Afghanistan “has resulted in sweeping changes to the lives of all Afghans, but even more for women and girls. They face dire restrictions on their rights in their daily lives.”

Since taking over the country, the Taliban have barred women from undergoing long road trips without a male relative, have ordered women to cover their faces in public and have prevented teenage girls from returning to secondary schools.

Akmal Dawi contributed to this report.

Related

  • RFE/RL Condemns Cutoff Of Its Broadcasts In 13 Afghan Cities
Posted in Media, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Afghans Show Mixed Feelings About US More Than a Year After Withdrawal

1st December, 2022 · admin

A file photo of American soldiers at an unknown location in Afghanistan.

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
December 1, 2022

Despite its chaotic military and diplomatic withdrawal from Afghanistan over a year ago, U.S. global leadership approval has seen a slight uptick among some Afghans, a new survey conducted inside the country says.

Approval of U.S. leadership among all Afghans is measured at 18%, slightly more than the 14% measured last year, while U.S. popularity is sharply different among different ethnic groups in Afghanistan.

“The U.S. remains popular among Afghanistan’s Hazara ethnic community; 53% are still supportive of U.S. leadership,” Gallup said in a statement about its latest survey in the country.

The Shia Hazaras are an ethnic and religious minority in Afghanistan making up 10 to 12% of the country’s estimated 36 million people.

Gallup says its surveyors interviewed 1,000 men and women from 21 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces this year.

Among Pashtuns, Afghanistan’s largest ethnic group, the U.S. remains widely unpopular with only an 8% approval rate, while among Tajiks, the second largest ethnic group, it’s reported at 23%.

Most Taliban leaders are Pashtuns who fought against the United States in Afghanistan from 2002 until U.S. and Taliban representatives signed a peace agreement in February 2020.

Despite its complex history of engagement in Afghanistan, the U.S. remains more popular in the South Asian country than China and Russia, whose leadership approval rates are equally ranked at 14% in the survey.

The U.S. spent about $2 trillion on the Afghan war for over two decades. More than 150,000 people lost their lives in the war, including at least 2,400 U.S. military personnel.

A majority of Americans, 69%, said the U.S. mostly failed in achieving its goals in Afghanistan, according to an August 2022 Pew survey.

Loss of hope

The drastic changes Afghanistan has seen over the last year seem to have disappointed an overwhelming majority of ordinary Afghans, according to the Gallup survey.

Nearly all Afghans, 98%, rated their living conditions as “suffering” under the new regime and only 11% said they have hopes for better opportunities for the next generation.

Afghans are also increasingly concerned about a sharp deterioration in women’s rights.

“A record-low 22% of Afghans say women in their country are treated with respect and dignity — down from the previous low of 31% in 2021,” reads a Gallup statement.

“The one positive we did see was in relation to the safety that Afghans feel within their communities. The percentage of Afghans who feel safe walking alone at night in their communities increased from 22% to 52%,” said Julie Ray, a Gallup analyst.

The Taliban’s return to power has crippled the Afghan economy, pushing 90% of the population into poverty, the United Nations has reported.

“Taliban’s rules of the 90s and currently can be encapsulated in one word: suffering,” Malaiz Daud, senior research fellow with the European Foundation for South Asian studies, told VOA.

“They lack the management, organizational and resource mobilization skills to run a polity designed to look after an entire country.”

Taliban officials, however, redirect all criticisms of economic paralysis to the West saying financial sanctions, assets freeze and a cessation of development assistance have pushed the country to the ongoing humanitarian crisis.

Editor’s note: An earlier version of this article incorrectly attributed a quote from Gallup analyst Julie Ray.

Posted in US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: US betrayal of Afghans |

875,000 children in Afghanistan at risk of severe wasting: UNICEF

30th November, 2022 · admin

Ariana: As many as 875,000 children in Afghanistan are at risk of severe wasting, the United Nations agency for children said on Tuesday. Sam Mort, chief of communication of UNICEF in Afghanistan, said on Twitter that the organization needs urgent support to prevent and treat malnourished boys and girls. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Health News

  • Ascending Graph of Measles Disease in Ghor, 29 Children Died in a Year
Posted in Afghan Children, Health News | Tags: Ghor, Measles |

Taliban Bans Ultrasound on Women in Herat Provincial Hospital

30th November, 2022 · admin

8am: Local sources in Herat report new restrictions imposed by the Taliban on women in the hospital in Herat province. On Wednesday, November 30, the sources, talking to Hasht-e Subh said that the Taliban have banned Ultrasound (Television Examinations) for women in the mentioned hospital. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Health News | Tags: Herat, Taliban war on women |
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