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NRF Missile Attack on Taliban Positions in Panjshir

17th November, 2022 · admin

8am: Local sources in Panjshir report a missile attack by National Resistance Front forces on Taliban positions in this province. The attack was carried out at around 12:00 on Wednesday night, November 16, on the house of Marshal Mohammad Qasim Fahim in the Umraz area of ​​Hesseh Awal district of Panjshir, which is currently being used by the Taliban as a military camp. Sources add that the Taliban, in revenge to this attack has tortured  and have  imprisoned several civilians. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Taliban Arrested Six Civilians, Including a Teacher in Kapisa – charged with collaborating with the National Resistance Front
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Human Rights, NRF - National Resistance Front, Security, Taliban | Tags: Kapisa, Panjshir |

SIGAR Gives Six Factors in Republic Govt Collapse

16th November, 2022 · admin

Ashraf Ghani

Tolo News: The US Special Inspector for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) in a recent report identified six factors it said led to the collapse of the former republic government of Afghanistan. The Afghan government failed to realize that the US would “actually” exit from Afghanistan, SIGAR said. For the fifth reason, SIGAR blames former President Ashraf Ghani who “governed through a highly selective, narrow circle of loyalists, destabilizing the government at a critical juncture.” “The president’s political and social isolation appears to have been a function of both his personality, and his desire to centralize and micromanage policy implementation,” the report said. The sixth and final reason was, the Afghan government’s high level of centralization, endemic corruption, and struggle to attain legitimacy were long-term contributors to its eventual collapse. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • US Auditor Report Blames Afghan Government for Collapse
Posted in Corruption, History, Political News, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Ashraf Ghani, Corrupt Ghani, Ghani Government Failure |

Taliban Poses Possible National Security Threat to the US, Says FBI

16th November, 2022 · admin

8am: Top US national security agencies have testified that the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan has contributed to violence and poor humanitarian conditions, posing a possible national security threat to the United States. Nearly 15 months after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan and the final US withdrawal from the country, the leaders of the FBI, Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) presented their assessments to the House Homeland Security Committee, indicating that the Taliban poses a threat to the West, Fox News reported on Tuesday (November 15th). Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Taliban Security Failure |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – November 16, 2022

16th November, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

‘Everyone Is Anxious’: Pakistan’s Mass Arrests Of Afghan Refugees Fuel Fear Of New Crackdown

16th November, 2022 · admin

پاکستانی پولیس کا مجبور افغان باشندوں سے ظلم کی انتہا جو بیچارے نہایت تنگ دستی میں علاج معالجہ کے لیے گئے ہیں مگر ان کو جانوروں کی طرح رسی سے باندھ کر ہانکا جارہا ہے۔ اگر افغانستان میں ایک خودمختار حکومت ہوتی تو پاکستان کے متعصب پولیس پشتون دشمنی میں افغانوں سے یہ ظلم نہ کرسکتے۔ pic.twitter.com/iDELM1JMob

— BILAL SARWARY (@bsarwary) November 9, 2022

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
Abubakar Siddique
November 16, 2022

A video shows a group of Afghan men and boys, all tied together with rope, being led away by police officers.

The 30-second video, widely shared on social media this month, purportedly shows a group of Afghan refugees who were arrested in Pakistan’s southern province of Sindh.

They are believed to be among the around 1,500 Afghan refugees, including women and children, who have been arrested in Sindh in recent weeks.

The authorities have said the Afghan nationals were charged with violating the Foreigners Act, a Pakistani law amended in 2016 that empowers authorities to deport foreigners lacking proper documentation. Courts can also fine or imprison foreigners for violating the law.

Those representing the Afghan citizens, however, complain that hundreds have been unlawfully arrested.

The mass arrests have fueled fears that Pakistan is waging a new crackdown against the millions of Afghan refugees and migrants residing in the South Asian nation. The authorities have warned foreigners that they will be deported or imprisoned for up to three years if they fail to renew their visas by December 31.

Tens of thousands of Afghans have fled to Pakistan since the Taliban seized power last year, joining the several million Afghan refugees and migrants already residing in the country for decades.

Many of the new arrivals have remained in Pakistan because of delays in getting visas to Western nations. Most have said they cannot afford the hundreds of dollars needed to renew their Pakistani visas.

‘Horrible Conditions’

Abdul Wakil, an Afghan national, said his son was among the hundreds of Afghans recently arrested in Sindh. He said some of those arrested, including his son, had valid visas or refugee status.

“Those in prison are living in horrible conditions,” Wakil, who requested that his real name not be used, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi. “Someone needs to pay attention to our plight.”

Muniza Kakar, a lawyer who is voluntarily representing Afghan refugees arrested in Pakistan, has helped free hundreds of people in recent days.

“I’ve met up to 400 imprisoned Afghans who had [valid] visas, but police confiscated their passports,” she told Radio Azadi.

Kakar said that when she pressed the police to return the documents, they refused and claimed no one was carrying any papers.

“Such treatment is aimed at tormenting Afghans who have been arrested,” she said.

Sohail Faiz, a senior police official in Karachi, the provincial capital of Sindh, said the arrests were part of a “combing operation against illegal immigrants” and would continue.

Senior leaders in Sindh’s provincial government have said Afghans are a “key source of violence and crime.” They have urged Islamabad for years to return Afghans to their homeland or resettle them in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, located along the Afghan border.

The United Nations refugee agency has criticized Pakistan’s mass arrests of Afghan refugees in recent weeks.

“Refugees should not be punished or criminalized for exercising their fundamental human right to seek asylum,” said Qaiser Khan Afridi, a spokesman for the UNHCR in Pakistan.

He said the UNHCR has called on Pakistan to suspend the forced return of Afghans regardless of their status, including asylum seekers who have had their claims rejected.

“We continue to urge neighboring countries, including Pakistan, to protect those seeking safety, as they have done for many years,” he said.

Mohsin Dawar, a lawmaker from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, told parliament that the Pakistani government is “responsible for formulating a law that must address” the problems of Afghan refugees.

“No one leaves their homeland unless they are forced to,” he said on November 14.

Islamabad has said some 250,000 Afghans have entered Pakistan since January 2021, most of them arriving after the Taliban takeover in August 2021. Most of them are educated professionals looking to resettle in another country.

Former government workers, rights campaigners, and journalists have expressed fears of Taliban persecution. Others have said they wish to escape the Taliban’s hard-line rule. The economic freefall has shuttered businesses and left scant options for alternative livelihoods. And the dire health-care situation has forced many Afghans to look abroad to Pakistan for medical treatment.

Before their arrival, Islamabad was already hosting an estimated 1.4 million documented refugees. Several hundred thousand more Afghans live in the country undocumented. So far this year, the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) has recorded the return of more than 65,000 Afghan refugees from Pakistan to Afghanistan.

Islamabad is not a signatory to international conventions on the rights of refugees. Pakistan has faced widespread accusations by Afghan refugees of harassment, ill-treatment, arbitrary detentions, and forced returns to Afghanistan.

Akbar, an Afghan national who has been living in hiding in Pakistan since his visa expired and who requested his real name not be used, said many Afghans fear a new clampdown by Pakistani authorities.

“Everyone is anxious about what will happen to them,” he told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi.

Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants |

Taliban Imprison and Torture the Residents of Gizab District of Uruzgan

16th November, 2022 · admin

8am: On Wednesday, November 16, sources told Hasht-e Subh that this incident happened two days ago after a person named Zahir Khan had a legal dispute with the residents of “Varg” village of Gizab district, but the local Taliban officials in this district by taking money from Zahir Khan has issued an order to summon the residents of this village. According to the sources, following this order, the Taliban forces took action against the residents, imprisoning and torturing them in the center of the respective district. Sources further added that the villagers are being humiliated and tortured due to fighting for their rights. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Corruption, Everyday Life, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Corrupt Taliban, Life under Taliban rule, Taliban torture, Uruzgan |

Pollution Increases as Kabul Residents Choose Coal Over Wood

16th November, 2022 · admin

Photo: Akmal Dawi/IRIN

Tolo News: The residents of Kabul said that as the price of wood remains high and they are obliged to use coal, which is causing air pollution and health issues. They called on officials to focus on the high prices of wood and gas. “Some people cannot purchase wood with a high price or use electricity, so they are using cheap coal,” said Hizbullah, a resident of Kabul. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Pollution increases in Afghanistan
Posted in Environmental News, Health News | Tags: Air Pollution, Kabul |

Uprooted Women’s Rights Activist Wants Change Within Afghanistan

16th November, 2022 · admin

Zarifa Gharifi

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
November 15, 2022

When the U.S. government started formally negotiating with the Taliban in Doha, Qatar, in 2019, Tamana Ayazi was concerned the process excluded prevalent fears of Afghan women that a Taliban return to power would deprive them of their basic human rights.

A filmmaker, Ayazi decided to tell the world what was at stake for Afghan women through a documentary centered on the life of a prominent Afghan woman.

“We began filming in January 2020,” Ayazi told VOA.

The ambitious project, however, was stalled by months of COVID-19 restrictions followed by rapid changes in Afghanistan after the Taliban returned to power, forcing Ayazi out of the country before she could put the final pieces together.

“As a female journalist and filmmaker, I could not return to Afghanistan to complete the project,” she said, adding that her male co-director was able to travel to Afghanistan to do the final filming in mid-2022.

‘I’m just the mayor’

Premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, the 90-minute documentary, “In Her Hands,” shows glimpses of the life of Zarifa Ghafari, the first female mayor of Maidan Shahr, an insurgency-stricken small city less than 30 miles to the south of Kabul, the Afghan capital.

Warned by the Taliban to quit her post or face death, the young mayor is filmed as she defies persistent social, political and even personal challenges until she tearfully flees the country after the Taliban returns to power in August 2021.

“Actually, I’m not a hero,” Ghafari is shown telling an audience at the U.S. State Department in March 2020 as she receives the International Women of Courage Award from former first lady Melania Trump. “I’m just the mayor of Maidan Shahr.”

The documentary then shows Ghafari surviving a Taliban ambush before cutting to a separate attack in November 2020, where Taliban assassins kill her father, an Afghan army official, in front of his house.

Less than six months after her evacuation to Germany, Ghafari returned to Afghanistan in February 2022 to assess the situation of women under Taliban rule.

“The situation is worsening day after day,” Ghafari told VOA last week from her home in Germany. “It’s painful … it’s like 100 ignorant individuals have taken over 2,000 people hostage in a village.”

The Taliban have reversed women’s rights gains in Afghanistan by closing secondary schools for girls and giving women no political representation. Last week, the regime prohibited women’s entry to public parks and sports facilities, alleging that the ban was issued because women did not appropriately observe Islamic hijab.

‘Lasting change should come from within’

Despite widespread calls to restore women’s rights, the Taliban have remained defiant, repeatedly introducing policies that banish Afghan women from the public space despite the condemnation of human rights groups.

“Women have been erased from public life and their civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights disregarded,” Richard Bennett, a U.N. Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan, said in October.

While commending international sympathy and support for Afghan women, Ghafari said advocacy in Western capitals alone will not bring lasting change to Afghanistan.

“Real and lasting change should come from within Afghanistan,” said Ghafari, warning that continued Taliban efforts to repress growing calls for change will only return the country to civil war.

“In Her Hands” will be available for streaming on Netflix beginning November 16. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZLunQrxs9I

Related

  • Zarifa Ghafari: 5 things to know about Afghanistan’s youngest female mayor
Posted in Afghan Women | Tags: Zarifa Ghafari |

Iran begins exporting tractors to Afghanistan

15th November, 2022 · admin

Tehran Times
November 15, 2022

TEHRAN – Consulate of Iran in Mazar-e-Sharif has announced the beginning of the export of tractors from Iran to Afghanistan, Fars News Agency reported.

As reported, Iran Tractor Manufacturing Company, a major Iranian tractor manufacturing company, has opened a representative office in Mazar-e-Sharif and the first cargo of the mentioned company’s tractors has arrived in the mentioned province.

Iranian manufacturers are currently producing 35,000 heavy duty tractors every year, 10,000 of which the country can export.

Posted in Economic News, Iran-Afghanistan Relations |

Pashtunization: Taliban’s PM Office Praises [Kuchi] Nomad’s Support During War Time

15th November, 2022 · admin

Mullah Hassan Akhund

8am: Office of the Taliban’s PM wrote in a newsletter on Tuesday, November 15, that the head of the office, Mullah Hassan Akhund, “has appreciated the achievements of the nomads during the Jihad.” He said that the nomads play an important role in strengthening the economy of Afghanistan and promised to solve their problems through the relevant bodies. On the other hand, the Taliban are accused of forcibly evacuating the local residents in a number of provinces and handing over their lands and properties to the nomads after their domination. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, Taliban | Tags: Kuchis, Mullah Hassan Akhund, Pashtun Kuchi Invasion, Pashtunization |
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