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  • This American Was Abducted In Kabul In 2022. His Family Is Desperately Waiting For News. April 12, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 12, 2026 April 12, 2026
  • Four Hazara Community Members Killed by Unknown Gunmen in Pakistan April 12, 2026
  • Neglected and Crumbling: Ghazni’s Historic Monuments on the Verge of Collapse April 12, 2026
  • Afghanistan Stalemate Once Favouring Taliban Begins To Shift, Says NRF Leader April 11, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 11, 2026 April 11, 2026
  • Sources: Taliban Arrest Shia Cleric in Herat Province April 11, 2026
  • Afghanistan: Sources say 12 people killed in Herat shooting April 11, 2026
  • Afghanistan’s new cricket head coach Richard Pybus arrives in Kabul April 11, 2026
  • US Has Accepted Only 3 Afghan Refugees Since October 2025 April 10, 2026

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Pashtunization: Taliban Allocates on 3020 Acres of Land in Farah to Build Township for Nomads

15th September, 2022 · admin

8am: According to sources, the Taliban has allocated 3,020 acres of land to build a township for the nomads and have started the process of land distribution. In the distribution inauguration ceremony of these lands, the Taliban said that the caretaker government of the Taliban will provide health and educational services to the nomads living in this town too. Recently, there have been reports of relocation of nomadic families in some provinces of the country. Not long ago, in Takhar province, the nomads, with the support of the Taliban, usurped the houses and properties of the natives and have been settled. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, Taliban | Tags: Destruction of non Pashtun history and culture by Pashtun Taliban, Farah, Kuchis, Land grabbing, Pashtun Kuchi Invasion, Pashtunization, Takhar |

Tolo News in Dari – September 14, 2022

14th September, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban restricts ferrying of Sikh scriptures out of Afghanistan; SGPC condemns move

14th September, 2022 · admin

The Tribune: The Taliban-led Afghanistan government has denied ferrying of four copies of Sikh scriptures (two Sri Guru Granth Sahib and two Sanchi Sahib) that were to accompany a group of 60 Afghan Sikhs, supposed to land in New Delhi on September 11.  The SGPC has strongly condemned the Taliban government for this. Terming it a direct interference in the religious affairs of Sikhs, SGPC president Harjinder Singh Dhami sought intervention of the Prime Minister and Ministry of External Affairs. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in India-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Sikhs |

Afghanistan’s Crypto Lifeline

14th September, 2022 · admin

New Yorker: For crypto-enthusiasts, the blockchain’s potential to create a bank-free utopia is best observed in countries whose economy is, in some way or another, compromised. Despite the cultish grift that has come to define crypto in the United States, a use-case like Afghanistan acts as a sort of paragon of its initial objective: decentralized global finance. But while it’s true crypto use in Afghanistan continues to scale, so too do the concerns around it. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News | Tags: Cryptocurrency in Afghanistan |

US Sets Up Swiss Fund for Afghan Reserves

14th September, 2022 · admin

VOA News
September 14, 2022

The United States said Wednesday it is setting up fund in Switzerland to manage $3.5 billion of Afghan reserves to be used to help stabilize Afghanistan’s economy.

A board of trustees will manage the Afghan Fund.

The U.S. Treasury said the fund will “protect, preserve and make targeted disbursements” of the Afghan money.

The funds could go toward items such as electricity imports, debt payments to international financial institutions and ensuring Afghanistan remains eligible for development aid.

The Taliban-run Afghan government has sought the return of billions of dollars in assets held in U.S. banks.

U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Ademeyo said in a letter that sending the money to Afghanistan’s central bank would put the funds at risk of not being used for the benefit of the Afghan people.

Some information for this report came from Agence France-Presse and Reuters.

Related

  • Taliban Want US to Reconsider Plan for Release of Afghan Reserves
Posted in Economic News, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Secretly funding Taliban |

Eight Killed In Roadside Bomb In Northwest Pakistan Claimed By Tehrik-e Taliban

14th September, 2022 · admin

TTP Flag

By RFE/RL’s Radio Mashaal
September 14, 2022

A roadside bomb has killed the former head of a pro-government militia and seven others in northwestern Pakistan, officials said September 14, in an attack claimed by the outlawed Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan militant group (TTP), otherwise known as the Pakistani Taliban.

Zahid Nawaz Marwat, police chief of the Swat district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province where the attack occurred late on September 13, told RFE/RL that a vehicle was targeted in the blast that killed five people.

For years Pakistan encouraged tribal vigilante forces known as peace committees to defend their villages against militants. Most have been subsequently disbanded as security improved across the country.

Marwat said former peace committee head Idrees Khan was killed when his pickup truck was hit by a roadside bomb.

Residents later told RFE/RL three more bodies were found in the area and the victims were believed to be passersby.

Another local police official confirmed the death toll, which included two local policemen, two private guards, and three laborers.

The attack was claimed by the TTP, who said Khan was involved in the killing their members.

The TTP also claimed responsibility for a clash with the Pakistani military in which three soldiers were killed on September 13 in the Kurram district bordering Afghanistan.

The TTP declared an open-ended cease-fire in June to facilitate peace talks with the Pakistan government being brokered by Afghanistan, but there have been regular clashes since then despite both sides saying the truce was still on.

Since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan last year Islamabad has regularly complained of attacks by the TTP, especially along their porous frontier.

The Pakistani and Afghan Taliban are separate groups but share a common ideology.

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.

Related

  • Taliban rejects Pakistan’s claims that JeM leader hiding out in Afghanistan
  • Taliban accuses Pakistan of firing on border security
  • Exchange of Gunfire Along the Durand Line: Taliban Accuses Pakistani Border Forces
Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Durand Line, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan |

More than 86.7 million doses of polio vaccine administered in Afghanistan

14th September, 2022 · admin

Ariana: The World Health Organization (WHO), says that since August 2021, more than 86.7 million doses of polio vaccine have been administered to Afghan children. The organization said on Wednesday that more than nine million children received this number of vaccines during eight vaccination campaigns across Afghanistan. “Ending polio in Afghanistan brings us closer to a polio-free world. We won’t stop until it’s done,” WHO tweeted. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Polio, Vaccination |

Taliban Claim Killing 40 Insurgents in Turbulent Northern Afghan Province

14th September, 2022 · admin

Zabihullah Mujahid

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
September 14, 2022

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN — Taliban security forces in Afghanistan have launched a large-scale “clearance operation” against insurgent forces in parts of the turbulent northern Panjshir province, killing dozens of them and capturing many more.

Chief Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told VOA Wednesday that the security action was carried out in three districts of the mountainous province to prevent “rebels” from threatening public security there.

“The clearance operation in Rekha, Dara and Afshar of Panjshir killed 40 rebels, including four commanders, and captured more than 100 others,” Mujahid said.

He said the operation was launched in response to subversive acts by insurgents earlier in the week. “Mujahedeen (security forces) concluded late last night and fighting has died down there.”

Growing insurgency

Critics say the anti-rebel offensive indicates the Taliban are struggling to contain the National Resistance Front, or NRF, a growing insurgency in Panjshir and parts of neighboring Baghlan province since taking over the war-torn country a year ago.

The NRF, which is led by Ahmad Massoud — an ethnic Tajik leader — has in recent months regularly claimed guerrilla attacks against Taliban forces in Panjshir, one of the smallest Afghan provinces. It is located just north of the capital, Kabul.

Until this week, the Taliban have consistently denied reports of widespread fighting in the area and dismissed the NRF as an “opposition force existing merely in social media,” saying they are in control of all of Afghanistan.

Sibghatullah Ahmadi, an NRF spokesman, accused via Twitter the Taliban of executing eight insurgent fighters after capturing them. He went on to claim that the action was in retaliation for repeated fatal NRF guerrilla attacks against Taliban forces over the past few days.

VOA was unable to immediately verify the Taliban or NRF claims from independent sources.

The United Nations Assistance mission in Afghanistan urged the warring parties to respect detainees’ rights, saying it was monitoring the situation and called for perpetrators of any crimes to be brought to justice.

“Gravely concerned by latest allegations of serious human rights violations in #Panjshir & elsewhere. Parties have clear international obligations,” the U.N. Assistance Mission said on Twitter.

Last month, the Taliban appointed one of their senior military commanders, Abdul Qayum Zakir, to counter NRF activities, reportedly leading to the deployment of large number of security forces in and around Panjshir, with air assets supporting ground operations.

The Taliban regained power in August 2021 when the internationally recognized Afghan government security forces collapsed in the face of stunning nationwide attacks by the then-insurgent group and all international troops withdrew from the country.

Panjshir was at the center of resistance against the Taliban when they were previously ruling the country (from 1996 to 2001) before being ousted by a United States-led foreign military intervention in Afghanistan days after the September 11, 2001 al-Qaida-plotted terror strikes against America. The province also played a crucial role in the U.S.-backed and -funded Afghan armed resistance against Soviet occupation of the country in the 1980s.

Massoud is the son of anti-Taliban mujahedeen commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, whom al-Qaida suicide bombers, posing as journalists, assassinated two days before the 9/11 attacks.

Critics are skeptical whether the NRF could pose a serious threat to the new Taliban rule. They say that unlike their previous stint in power, Taliban fighters are now better armed, possessing U.S. armored vehicles and other sophisticated military weapons left behind by the United States and NATO militaries.

Related

  • Senior NRF Commander Killed As Clashes Escalate in Panjshir
  • UNAMA Deeply Concerned at Spate of Extrajudicial Executions of War Prisoners in Panjshir
Posted in Human Rights, NRF - National Resistance Front, Security, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Panjshir, War Crime |

Russia Offers Excuses for Taliban Closing Schools for Girls

14th September, 2022 · admin

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
September 13, 2022

From the world’s second-smallest state, Monaco, to the most populous country, India, representatives from more than 20 governments and international organizations on Monday condemned the Taliban’s policies of shutting down secondary schools and denying other fundamental rights to Afghan girls and women.

Even Pakistan, the purported benefactor of the Taliban, voiced concern at a United Nations dialogue on human rights in Afghanistan about the denial of education for Afghan girls. The dialogue was part of the U.N. Human Rights Council’s 51st session, which opened Monday in Geneva.

Russia and China notably did not join in the criticism. A Russian diplomat pointed to progress made for women’s rights under the Taliban.

“We note efforts by the new Afghan government to ensure the rights of women and girls in the areas of marriage and property inheritance,” a Russian representative told the U.N. event, adding that more than 130,000 women are employed in the health and education sectors.

No Taliban representative was present at the event because the U.N. does not recognize the Taliban’s so-called Islamic Emirate as the legitimate government of Afghanistan. Instead, diplomats of the former Afghan government are still accredited as Afghan representatives at U.N. headquarters in New York and Geneva.

The Russian diplomat further said that some schools were closed because the Taliban could not afford to set up segregated classrooms for girls. He blamed the United States and other Western donors for freezing aid to Afghanistan and imposing sanctions on the Taliban which, according to the Russian diplomat, have adversely affected the Afghan education sector.

“We call on the U.S. and the U.K. and their satellites — instead of issuing new demands to the Taliban, to begin fulfilling their own obligations for the past conflict,” he said, adding that the current crisis in Afghanistan was a result of the past two decades of U.S. intervention there.

While calling for the return of girls to secondary schools in Afghanistan, a Chinese representative also avoided criticizing the Taliban’s policy.

“We call on the countries concerned to respect sovereignty and territorial integrity of the country and to lift unilateral sanctions,” the Chinese representative said.

Monday’s statement was the strongest that any Russian official has made in support of the Taliban.

“The Russian representative’s statements in Geneva aren’t consistent with what Russia has said before in other settings about Afghanistan,” John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, told VOA.

“As recently as this June, Russia agreed to a strongly worded statement by the U.N. Security Council about Afghanistan in which the Security Council as a bloc, including Russia, called on the Taliban to let girls go to school.”

Even the Taliban have not said that Western sanctions and the resulting economic problems have forced them to shut secondary schools for girls. Taliban officials have offered religious and cultural justifications for their decision against secondary education for girls.

“We recognize that the economic crisis is impacting the humanitarian situation. We agree about that. But the idea that it’s responsible for the fact that [the] Taliban do not let girls go to secondary schools is absurd. It is preposterous. It is a lie,” said Sifton.

Women ‘erased’

The U.N. and human rights groups accuse the Taliban of implementing policies that are aimed at erasing women from the public spheres.

“There is no country in the world where women and girls have so rapidly been deprived of their fundamental human rights purely because of gender,” Richard Bennett, U.N. special rapporteur on Afghanistan, told the U.N. Human Rights Council’s 51st session.

“Do you know what that feeling is, to be erased?” Mahbouba Seraj, an Afghan women’s rights activist, asked the same session. “I’m erased, and I don’t know what else to do. … How many times am I supposed to yell and scream and say, ‘World, pay attention to us. We are dying’?”

The Taliban have defended their policies toward Afghan women while accusing the U.N. and rights activists of spreading “malicious propaganda” against their de facto government.

“Today, nothing threatens the lives of women in Afghanistan, and no woman or her loved ones die in the war or raids,” said a Taliban statement issued in response to Bennett’s report. “There are 181 public and private universities open for men and women in the country, and thousands of women work in education, higher education, public health, passport and national identification bureaus, airports, police, media, banks and other sectors.”

Such statements, however, are viewed with deep skepticism outside Taliban circles.

The Taliban have become increasingly authoritarian, clamping down on freedom of expression and denying people their civic and political rights, the U.N. has reported.

At the U.N. event, representatives from many countries called for stronger international pressure on the Taliban to respect women’s rights.

“Anyone seeking to participate in the international system must respect [women’s rights]. If we don’t all insist on that, then shame on us,” said Michèle Taylor, U.S. representative to the U.N. Human Rights Council.

In April, the U.N. General Assembly suspended Russia from the Human Rights Council because of the country’s reported atrocities in Ukraine.

Posted in Afghan Women, China-Afghanistan Relations, Education, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule |

Is Afghanistan’s Long Civil War Really Over?

13th September, 2022 · admin

Foreign Affairs: The Forces That Could Threaten the Taliban’s Control – Peering ahead, a renewed civil war could take many forms. One is the resumption of decades-long fighting between the Taliban, which is composed primarily of Pashtuns, and resistance groups based in the country’s north that tend to draw from Afghanistan’s Hazara, Tajik, and Uzbek minorities. So far, the Taliban has faced little more than sporadic attacks from these groups and fiery statements from their exiled leaders—a far cry from an effective insurgency. But that could change with time if the groups can build up their cohesion and resilience and win over popular support. Resistance groups could also wind up receiving support from Iran or Russia, which might decide to aid them because of historical relationships, cultural ties, opposition to the Islamic State, and competition with Pakistan. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Ethnic Issues, History, Opinion/Editorial, Security, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Civil War in Afghanistan |
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