NYT: The circumstances of Mr. Faqirzada’s detainment by immigration officials have become increasingly common as President Trump uses more aggressive tactics to expel immigrants, including those like Mr. Faqirzada who have followed legal procedures to gain citizenship. While some immigration cases have been thrust into the limelight, tens of thousands of migrants have wound up in federal facilities and been quietly deported without their stories spilling into public view. Click here to read more (external link).
Historic Gold: Jahangir Wins Afghanistan’s First Islamic Games Title

Tolo News: Mohammad Yousuf Jahangir, a member of Afghanistan’s national Muay Thai team, made history by winning a gold medal at the Islamic Solidarity Games, marking Afghanistan’s name in this prestigious international event. With this victory, Jahangir becomes the first-ever Afghan athlete to win a historic gold medal at the Islamic Solidarity Games. He already has two other medals from Asian and world-level competitions to his name. Click here to read more (external link).
Other Afghan Sports News
US Drone Flights Over Afghanistan Continue Unabated, Says Taliban

US MQ-9 Reaper drone (file photo)
Afghanistan International: In an interview with Iran’s state broadcaster IRIB, Mujahid repeated the Taliban’s call for the flights to end, saying they must be stopped “as soon as possible” and describing them as a breach of Afghanistan’s airspace. He said Taliban authorities had raised their objections in the limited meetings available to them. Mujahid did not specify which neighbouring country’s airspace the drones reportedly cross before entering Afghanistan, though he has previously accused Pakistan of providing access to US aircraft. Click here to read more (external link).
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Tolo News in Dari – November 15, 2025
Tajikistan Delegation Visits Kabul to Strengthen Ties and Address Regional Security

Khaama: A high-level Tajikistan delegation visited Kabul to meet Taliban officials, discussing embassy control, bilateral cooperation, and addressing regional security concerns along Afghanistan’s northern borders. This visit follows earlier meetings in Kunduz province, where Tajik officials met with Taliban representatives, highlighting a gradual thaw in diplomatic interactions between Kabul and Dushanbe. Click here to read more (external link).
Removal of the Uzbek Language from Jawzjan University’s Signboard: A Stark Symbol of Taliban Linguistic Discrimination and Hostility
8am: Marshal Abdul Rashid Dostum, former First Vice President, reacted to the removal of the Uzbek language from the Jawzjan University plaque, stating that this act has further revealed the discriminatory nature of the Taliban. According to him, such measures are an insult to the identity and culture of the country’s Turkic communities and inflict a fresh wound on the unity of the people of Afghanistan. Click here to read more (external link).
Naturalized Kazakhs From Afghanistan Rendered Stateless After Astana Revokes Citizenships
By RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service
November 15, 2025
Aynuddin Muradi has been a citizen of Kazakhstan for years, but he now faces deportation to his country of birth, Afghanistan.
Kazakh authorities in May stripped the 27-year-old of his citizenship on the grounds that he is not ethnic Kazakh, a claim he denies.
Muradi, who is appealing the decision, gave up his Afghan nationality when he gained Kazakh citizenship in 2019. Citizens of the Central Asian country are not allowed to hold dual nationality.
Now, Muradi — whose child was born in Kazakhstan — is effectively stateless.
“I will not give up on my country [Kazakhstan],” Muradi, who speaks fluent Kazakh, told RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service. “I will not move to another country.”
He is not alone. Dozens of ethnic Kazakhs from Afghanistan have been stripped of their citizenship by Astana in the past two years over doubts about their ethnicity.
Resettlement Program
Kazakhstan offers citizenship to ethnic Kazakhs who emigrate from abroad. Over 1 million ethnic Kazakhs from neighboring countries have moved to the oil-rich Central Asian country since the 1990s.
According to official figures, some 13,000 ethnic Kazakhs from Afghanistan have immigrated to Kazakhstan since the country gained independence following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
Kazakh authorities say there are only several hundred ethnic Kazakhs remaining in Afghanistan. But ethnic Kazakhs in Afghanistan estimate the number is much higher.
Many members of the ethnic Kazakh community speak Dari or Uzbek and live among ethnic Uzbek communities in northern Afghanistan. Most of them reside in rural areas and are engaged in livestock farming.
‘Not A Kazakh’
Muradi is a native of Afghanistan’s northern province of Kunduz. He moved to Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city, in 2016 to attend university. Muradi, who lives in central Karaganda Province, later got married in Kazakhstan.
Last year, he was informed by the authorities that his citizenship was being revoked because the Kazakh Embassy in Kabul determined that he was “not Kazakh but Uzbek,” without offering details. In May, a local court upheld the decision.
Muradi is appealing against the decision but faces an uphill battle to prove he is ethnic Kazakh.
Bakhyt Sarai, director of the nongovernmental Elsana Amanat Foundation, which helps Afghans trying to reclaim their Kazakh citizenship, said Astana has revoked the citizenship of some 250 Afghans in recent years.
In 2023, she said, the Kazakh Embassy in Kabul shared with Astana a list of Kazakh citizens originally from Afghanistan whom it suspected were not ethnic Kazakhs.
Sarai said many of those whose citizenship had been revoked have married in Kazakhstan and their children were born there. Many have become stateless and are likely to be forced to return to Afghanistan, she said.
“They are afraid of returning to Afghanistan because their children cannot study or integrate into society,” Sarai told RFE/RL.
In comments to RFE/RL, Kazakhstan’s Interior Ministry said it had received information “from authorized bodies” that those stripped of Kazakh citizenship “did not belong to the Kazakh nationality” and that these individuals “presented false documents confirming their Kazakh nationality.”
The ministry added that these individuals must return to Afghanistan to obtain a passport and legalize their stay in Kazakhstan.
Among those who lost their Kazakh citizenship is Abdul Khalil Najibullah.
The 56-year-old said he lost his farm and business in Kazakhstan after he was stripped of his citizenship in 2021. He said he was accused of lying about his ethnicity, which he denies.
Najibullah first moved to Kazakhstan in 2000 from the northern Afghan province of Faryab, where he was born. He has appealed against the decision and is fighting his case in court.
“I have repeatedly asked how I can live without any documents,” Najibullah, who still resides in Kazakhstan, said of his appeals to the Kazakh authorities. “I was told that this is my problem [not theirs].”
Written by Abubakar Siddique based on reporting by RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service
Copyright (c) 2025. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Tolo News in Dari – November 14, 2025
Months after devastating earthquake in Kunar, survivors still await critical aid as winter sets in
Amu: As temperatures begin to drop, survivors of the August earthquake in eastern Afghanistan say they have yet to receive critical aid and continue to live in precarious conditions, raising fears of further suffering during the winter months. Despite repeated appeals, residents say that neither the Taliban authorities nor humanitarian organizations have provided the necessary support to rebuild homes or offer employment. Click here to read more (external link).
Suicide Bombers In Islamabad & Waziristan Were Afghan Nationals, Says Pak Minister
Afghanistan International: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said both the suicide attacks in South Waziristan and Islamabad had been carried out by Afghan nationals. Naqvi said on Thursday that it had been confirmed the attackers had come from Afghanistan and had carried out the assaults. He had earlier said the militants involved in the attack on the Wana Military College had been in contact with their organisers in Afghanistan. Click here to read more (external link).
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