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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
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  • Tolo News in Dari – April 2, 2026 April 2, 2026
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  • Afghanistan falls 5–1 to Syria in Asian Cup qualifier April 2, 2026
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Tolo News in Dari – October 12, 2022

12th October, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Repress and Threaten Students, Seven Hazara Girls Students Expelled from Girl’s Hostel of Kabul University

12th October, 2022 · admin

8am: The deadly attack on the Kaaj Educational Training Center in the Dasht-e Barchi area in the west of Kabul, which killed more than 50 people and wounded 110 others, caused widespread protests inside and outside the country. Incited female students and female protesters started a march a day after this attack. These protests were suppressed by the Taliban in Kabul, Balkh, and Herat provinces, and several female protesters were arrested and released on bail. In the latest case, the Taliban threatened a number of female students in the dormitory of the Kabul University on the charge of “Inciting girls to march” and expelled seven of them from this dormitory. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • In Afghanistan, Resistance Means Women – Nationwide Protests Follow Deadly Attack on Hazara Girls Taking Exam
  • Marzia And Hajar: The Best Friends Who Were Killed Together In Kabul Bombing
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Ethnic Issues, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: genocide, Hazaras, Life under Taliban rule, Pashtun Taliban |

US Places More Sanctions on Taliban Over Treatment of Women

12th October, 2022 · admin

AFP: The United States announced new sanctions Tuesday against the Taliban as punishment for their repressive treatment of women and girls in Afghanistan. Secretary of State Antony Blinken unveiled the new visa restriction policy for current or former members of the Taliban and others involved in repressing women through restrictive policies and violence. Blinken made the announcement on the U.N.’s International Day of the Girl Child. Click here to read more (external link).

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

Aid Agencies Express Concern over Taliban’s Interference in Aid Distribution

11th October, 2022 · admin

Taliban militant (file photo)

8am: In a survey, the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief (ACBAR) reports the complaints of people and organizations regarding the intervention of local Taliban members in the aid distribution process.  The results of this survey published Tuesday indicate that almost all organizations have deep concern over the issue, saying that the local Taliban members and tribal elders intervene in the evaluation process and distribute aid to their relatives. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Corruption, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Taliban stealing aid |

Tolo News in Dari – October 11, 2022

11th October, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Afghanistan’s Dwindling Sikh Community Escapes to India

11th October, 2022 · admin

Anjana Pasricha
VOA News
October 11, 2022

NEW DELHI — In a Sikh temple tucked in the narrow lanes of the Indian capital, New Delhi, 60-year Harbans Singh offers a prayer of gratitude. The temple has become his temporary home after he fled Afghanistan, where his family had lived for generations.

“We have left our homes, our shops and come here to save ourselves. Conditions there are very bad,” said Singh. “We have arrived empty-handed.”

Singh and his son along with other family members were in a group of 55 Afghan Sikhs who arrived in India in late September — they were among the last members of the community still living in the strife-torn country. Only a handful remain in Afghanistan, according to those who have come to India.

Afghan Sikhs numbered in the tens of thousands during the nineteen eighties when they ran well-established businesses. But driven out by decades of conflict and persecution, only a few hundred were left when the Taliban took power last August.

Although the Taliban had assured the community of their right to remain in Afghanistan and to practice their religion, its return reignited fears of a resurgence in violence that had targeted the community.

The latest exodus of the Afghan Sikhs was sparked by a deadly attack in June on a Sikh temple in Kabul that killed one worshipper and wounded seven others. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack.

Even before Taliban rule, Sikh temples had been the target of attacks that were also claimed by the Islamic State group.

The dread of waiting for the next attack or staying hidden from sight is over for those fleeing Afghanistan. Harbans Singh’s son, Harminder Singh, said it is a relief not to live in fear of “explosions and gunfire” that had become commonplace in their hometown, Jalalabad and had petrified them.

The Indian government has facilitated the repatriation of Sikhs and Hindus leaving Afghanistan by offering visas, residency permits and organizing evacuation flights. The birthplace of Sikhism, India is home to most of the world’s Sikh population.

The Singhs, who had never visited India, feel safe in the Sikh temple where they have got refuge. It has long been the first stop for those leaving Afghanistan and is known in the neighborhood as the temple for those from Kabul.

But uprooting themselves from a country they had called home for generations was also hard.

“We had our temples there, our community and we used to organize fairs on special occasions. Leaving our life there makes me feel sad,” recalled Harminder Singh.

It was not just fear of violence that prompted them to leave. The collapse of the economy after the Taliban took power hit their businesses making the future look bleak.

The Singhs owned a shop selling spices in Jalalabad — most members of the community in Afghanistan were either shop owners or pharmacists, selling goods that came from India or Pakistan. They said there was amity among Sikhs and ordinary Muslims, many of who they counted as their customers. But in the past year, work had dwindled. “It was not what it used to be earlier. There was too much turmoil and customers had stopped coming,” according to Harminder Singh.

His two children also could not get an education which was organized for the community in the temple in the last year. “The teacher stopped coming,” he explained.

But while India offers safety, the future may not be easy for Singh’s family because the wait for citizenship can be long and uncertain.

It presents a conundrum for the Afghan Sikhs, said Partap Singh, who heads the Sikh temple, Guru Arjan Dev ji gurudwara, that offers shelter to those returning from Afghanistan.

“In Afghanistan, they used to say we are Indians. Here they say we are Afghans,” said Partap Singh, “Where do we belong? We don’t know where to go or what to do. We have no future.”

The community is urging the government to extend more help as it confronts the agonizing task of rebuilding life from scratch.

“They don’t have proper homes, work, or citizenship papers that would facilitate their rehabilitation. Even educating their children is a challenge,” according to Partap Singh. “They are facing so many hardships. Some are setting up pavement stalls or selling street food to earn a living.”

These are problems that Singh and his son will have to grapple with in the coming years. For the time being, they are just getting used to a new country but for the time being the temple where they are sheltered offers both refuge and comfort — many here understand the language they used to speak in Afghanistan, a mix of Pashto and Dari.

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, India-Afghanistan Relations, ISIS/DAESH, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Sikhs, Life under Taliban rule |

Afghanistan: Suicidal Course – Analysis

11th October, 2022 · admin

SATP: The principal actor responsible for the rising trend in suicide attacks is the IS-KP, which wants to replace the Taliban as the main ‘Islamic’ power center in Afghanistan, and to delegitimize the Taliban ideologically and militarily by showcasing the latter’s weakness to the Islamic world, including both its supporters and its detractors. Targeted attacks on pro-Taliban scholars such as Sheikh Rahimullah Haqqani could also send a chilling message to religious clerics not to openly take pro-Taliban and anti-IS-KP positions. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, ISIS/DAESH, Security, Taliban | Tags: Suicide Attack |

Criminal Cases on the Rise in Afghanistan, at Least 8 Killed in One Day

11th October, 2022 · admin

8am: At least eight people have been killed over the past 24 hours in separate incidents in some provinces of Afghanistan, sources reported. In the first case, two women and one man were murdered by unknown individuals in Khogyani district of Nangarhar province on Sunday. The victims’ bodies were found Monday by the local residents. The motive behind the murders however is not yet clear. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Crime and Punishment, Security | Tags: Taliban Security Failure |

Taliban says 5.1 earthquake jolts northeastern Afghanistan

11th October, 2022 · admin

AP: A 5.1 magnitude earthquake on Tuesday jolted the Afghan city of Faizabad, the capital city of northeastern Badakhshan province, a Taliban official said. Abdul Wahid Rayan, the director of the Taliban news agency Bakhtar, said the center of the quake was Shaghnan district and it was felt in other parts of the province. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Environmental News | Tags: Badakhshan, Earthquake |

Afghanistan, Venezuela Among Candidates for UN Rights Body

11th October, 2022 · admin

Margaret Besheer
VOA News
October 10, 2022

NEW YORK — The U.N. General Assembly will vote Tuesday to admit 14 countries to the 47-member Human Rights Council; among them are some candidates with poor rights records, including Afghanistan and Venezuela.

Seventeen candidate countries from five regional groups are running, but only two groups — Asia-Pacific and Latin America and Caribbean states — face a real contest. The other three groups are running “clean slates”— although countries will still need a simple majority of the secret ballots to make it onto the Geneva-based council.

Venezuela is in a contested group. It will face Chile and Costa Rica for two available seats.

“Venezuela’s vengeful assault on critics of the government makes the country unfit for membership in the U.N.’s top rights body,” Louis Charbonneau, U.N. director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. “Returning this abusive government to the council would undermine the U.N.’s credibility by rewarding Venezuelan authorities with a role in judging other countries’ human rights while they brutalize their population.”

A U.N. fact-finding mission said in a September report that President Nicolas Maduro’s intelligence agency has suppressed the country’s opposition through arbitrary detentions and torture that amounted to war crimes. On Friday, the human rights council renewed the mission’s mandate for another two years.

The Maduro government has dismissed the accusations as “false and unfounded.”

“U.N. member states will soon have the opportunity to close the door on Venezuela’s return to the Human Rights Council,” Charbonneau added. “With the likes of China, Eritrea and Cuba already on the council, the U.N. rights body would benefit from having one fewer member who’s a walking advertisement for torture and other abuses, and impunity.”

Another controversial candidate is Afghanistan, which has been in the headlines for the past year for the Taliban’s mistreatment of women, girls and minorities, and their broad crackdown on personal freedoms.

Countries that join the council are expected to “uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights” both at home and abroad.

While Afghanistan is de facto under Taliban control, its U.N. seat is still in the hands of the previous government, in large part because no country has officially recognized the Taliban regime. If elected, it would be the hold-over diplomats who are loyal to the previous government who would take the HRC seat.

Afghanistan will face Bangladesh, Kyrgyzstan, Maldives, South Korea and Vietnam in its regional group for four vacant seats.

Human Rights Watch is critical of Vietnam’s human rights record, saying the one-party rule of the Communist Party systematically suppresses basic civil and political rights. Government critics are often subjected to police harassment, arbitrary arrest and jail.

In the African regional bloc, Algeria, Morocco, South Africa and Sudan are competing uncontested for four seats. In the Eastern Europe group, Georgia and Romania are running a so-called clean slate, as are Belgium and Germany in the Western European and Others group.

Members serve for a period of three years and are not eligible for immediate re-election after serving two consecutive terms. The new members will start their terms on January 1, 2023.

Criticism

The council has a mixed reputation. Diplomats say it has produced some important and strong reports on war crimes in places such as Syria and spotlights domestic abuses in North Korea, Iran and Myanmar, among others. But it is also frequently criticized for its focus on Israel and the inclusion among its members of several countries with poor rights records of their own such as China and Pakistan.

This year, the council took the rare action of suspending a member for its bad behavior.

On April 7, Russia became only the second state to be suspended (Moammar Gadhafi’s Libya was the first) from the HRC, when the General Assembly voted Moscow off for atrocities it has been accused of in its war in Ukraine. The Czech Republic was voted to finish the remainder of the term through December 2023.

The Human Rights Council was created in 2006 to replace the dysfunctional U.N. Human Rights Commission, which was disbanded.

Some information in this report came from Reuters.

Posted in Human Rights, Taliban, UN-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Ashraf Ghani Government |
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