8am: The Taliban-controlled ministry decided to ban the use of TikTok and PUBG in a meeting attended by representatives of the Taliban’s security sectors and the Ministry of Virtue Promotion. According to the decision of the Taliban’s Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, TikTok will be banned in Afghanistan within one month and PUBG after three months. Click here to read more (external link).
Tolo News in Dari – September 17, 2022
Taliban Rebels Brutally Torture a Cleric of Panjshir
8am: In a house-to-house search operation in Dara Abdullah Khel, Panjshir on Friday, the Taliban rebels seriously tortured Mawlawi Abdul Sami Muslih, the imam of Mian Deh village along with one of the youths of this area, sources said. This incident occurred when the detention of boys under age and elders was criticized by Mawlawi Muslih and some villagers. Click here to read more (external link).
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Areas Where Taliban Committed War Crimes Must Be Investigated Impartially, Says NRF

Sibghatullah Ahmadi
8am: Following the criticism of committing war crimes and the Taliban’s treatment of prisoners of war, the National Resistance Front (NRF) has demanded the dispatch of fact-finding investigative delegations to the areas where, according to the front, the Taliban have committed war crimes. Sibghatullah Ahmadi, the NRF spokesman tweeted on Saturday (September 17th) that human rights organizations have limited themselves to statements, tweets and Facebook posts in response to the crimes committed by the Taliban. Click here to read more (external link).
Afghan Insurgent Leader Calls for New Anti-Taliban ‘Political’ Front

Massoud
AFP: Afghan insurgent group leader Ahmad Massoud on Friday urged the diaspora to unite to find a political solution to end Taliban rule, describing his appeal as the beginning of a new phase. Massoud, who heads the National Resistance Front (NRF), an armed group waging an insurgency in Afghanistan’s northern Panjshir Valley, said it was time to try to bring the Taliban back to the negotiating table. “We want to unify the diaspora … and slowly expand the dialogue and reach to the point where we have a road map for the future of Afghanistan,” he told a conference in Vienna. Click here to read more (external link).
Public Education in Afghanistan Faces Collapse, for Boys and Girls
Akmal Dawi
VOA News
September 16, 2022
Caught between the Taliban’s gender politics and a lack of foreign funding, the public education sector in Afghanistan faces the risk of collapse, aid agencies warn.
At least $1.5 billion is required annually to keep public schools open for millions of students, to pay salaries and provide other essential educational resources, but the war-torn country is unable to provide that amount on its own.
Facing international sanctions, Afghanistan’s de facto Taliban government has set a national budget of about $2.6 billion this year, which already suffers from a nearly $500 million deficit.
“Approximately 187,000 teachers will need salary support to avoid a total collapse of the education system,” Ashiqullah Mandozai, a spokesperson for Save the Children in Afghanistan, told VOA.
“The new MoE [Ministry of Education] has indicated that they can only pay salaries for 30% of the current work force, which underlines a precarious position for public infrastructure without development funding,” Mandozai said.
Foreign donors have stopped development funding for Afghanistan, including to the public education sector, since the Taliban seized power last year but have maintained humanitarian assistance, mostly to avert mass hunger in the country.
Donors also strongly disagree with the Taliban’s educational policies, particularly with the closure of secondary schools for girls.
“Between the Taliban’s bad politics and a lack of donor funding, Afghanistan’s education system is being decimated,” said Ghulam Mohammad Fida, director of Afghan Education for a Better Tomorrow, a California-based nongovernmental organization.
The U.N. says Afghanistan’s education system has been devastated by decades of sustained armed conflicts, and almost 4 million Afghan children are already deprived of schooling.
In January and February, the U.N. children’s agency (UNICEF) paid Afghan teachers a support salary of $100 per person but stopped the payments after the Taliban reneged on their pledge to reopen secondary schools for girls in March.
“The system is undoubtedly strained, and the increased demand for education across the country will require additional support to ensure that children are able to access learning,” Joe English, a UNICEF spokesperson, told VOA.
Schools closed, transformed
Secondary schools for girls in most parts of Afghanistan have been closed for more than a year as Taliban authorities say they are waiting for a verdict from religious scholars on the reopening of schools for all girls.
Despite widespread domestic and international condemnation, the Taliban have not indicated when or whether these schools will reopen.
“Depriving girls of secondary education translates to a loss of at least $500 million to the Afghan economy in the last 12 months,” UNICEF said last month.
Moreover, the Taliban are increasingly transforming public schools into religious seminaries by overhauling the educational curriculum, hiring clerics as teachers and principals, and discouraging female participation in the educational system.
The “USAID [U.S. Agency for International Development] also expressed concern about the conversion of public school buildings, specifically technical and vocational education and training centers and teacher-training colleges, to madrassas. Hours of instruction allocated to religious studies have also reportedly been increased during the quarter,” the U.S. government’s Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction reported to Congress in July.
Senior Taliban officials, such as the minister for higher education, have publicly berated modern education and have vowed for a strict Islamization of Afghanistan’s educational system.
Made up entirely of male Islamic clerics, the Taliban’s de facto government has failed to earn recognition from any country in the world as it faces universal condemnation for its extremist policies.
In response, Taliban leaders say they are accountable only to God and that the leadership will never budge on its pure Islamic governance.
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Amnesty Confirms Fresh Videos Show Taliban Executing Resistance Fighters
By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
September 16, 2022
Amnesty International says its initial investigation validates the authenticity of videos shared on social media depicting what appears to be extrajudicial executions carried out by the Taliban of members of a resistance group operating mainly out of the Panjshir Valley.
The United Nations has already voiced “grave concern” about the videos, which show two groups of men from the National Resistance Front (NRF) squatting on a hillside with their hands tied behind their backs before being shot with automatic rifles by Taliban fighters.
“Amnesty International conducted an initial assessment and can confirm that these are new videos of extrajudicial executions, carried out by the Taliban, of apparent members of the National Resistance Front (NRF) in Panjshir,” the London-based rights watchdog said in a tweet on September 15.
A Taliban spokesman has said authorities were investigating the matter.
Early this week, the Taliban said it had killed at least 40 NRF fighters in the Panjshir Valley.
The UN special rapporteur for Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, in a statement on Twitter voiced deep concern “about latest allegations of extrajudicial summary executions in Panjshir” and called for an “immediate thorough investigation and for perpetrators to be held accountable. I am closely monitoring the situation.”
Sibghatullah Ahmadi, a spokesman for the NRF, called the killings “war crimes” and urged the UN mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) to “fulfil its obligations of not only being ‘concerned’ but also gaining the courage to name the Taliban, condemn their crimes and call on the UN security council to take immediate action.”
UNAMA has accused the Taliban of committing hundreds of human rights violations since the militants seized power in August 2021 as international forces left the country.
With reporting by AFP
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.
Tolo News in Dari – September 16, 2022
250 companies submit bids for iron, lead mines in Afghanistan
Ariana: [Taliban] Afghan Ministry of Mines and Petroleum said this week that 250 domestic and foreign firms have submitted their bids for the iron mine in Herat and lead mine in Ghor province. Esmatullah Burhan, a spokesman for the Ministry of Mines and Petroleum, said that it is evaluating the bids and will soon announce the winners. The iron ore in Herat’s Ghoryan district is estimated to hold 18 million tons of iron. The lead mine in Ghor is also considered to be one of the largest lead mines in the region. “The [Taliban] government will collect a good amount of revenue from it. Hundreds of thousands of jobs will be generated directly or indirectly,” said Burhan. Click here to read more (external link).
Taliban War on Civilians: Taliban Extrajudicially Execute Six Hazara People in Ghor, says Amnesty International

Taliban militants (file photo)
8am: Amnesty International in its latest probe said that on June 26, the Taliban killed at least 6 civilians affiliated with the Hazara community in Ghor province. In the continuation of this report, it is stated that the Taliban have arrested and executed four men in a night operation following the search for a former security officer. The report adds that a woman and a 12-year-old girl were also killed during this attack. According to this organization, traces of torture were found on the body of one of the victims. Click here to read more (external link).
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