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  • The Afghanistan Freedom Front Claims It Has Killed Four Taliban Fighters in Baghlan April 13, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – April 13, 2026 April 13, 2026
  • Fear of Forced Return: Former Military Personnel of Afghanistan Living Under Threat and Uncertainty April 13, 2026
  • 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

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More money to Taliban by Saudi Arabia

10th June, 2022 · admin

Ariana: Saudi Arabia on Thursday announced a $30 million grant to support the Afghanistan Humanitarian Trust Fund (AHTF). Operated under the umbrella of the Islamic Development Bank in coordination with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the AHTF grant will be provided through the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center and the Saudi Fund for Development. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Arab-Afghan Relations, Corruption, Economic News, Taliban | Tags: Saudi Arabia, Secretly funding Taliban |

Watchdog Urges Harsher International Measures Against Taliban For Rights Violations

9th June, 2022 · admin

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
June 9, 2022

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has called on the international community to impose tougher restrictions on Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers in response to what the watchdog called a “grave human rights crisis” that has been especially affecting women and girls after the group’s return to power in August.

Since taking over, the Taliban has rolled back two decades of gains made by the country’s women, who have been squeezed out of many government jobs, barred from traveling alone, and ordered to dress according to a strict interpretation of the Koran.

HRW said in a statement on June 9 that in particular, the radical group’s decision on March 23 to prolong a ban on girls’ secondary school education has prompted international condemnation.

But the group said condemnation “is not enough” because it does not “make the Taliban hurt” and urged the international community to take more effective steps against Afghanistan’s current rulers.

“It’s time for governments to turn consensus that the Taliban’s actions are unlawful into coordinated actions that show the Taliban that the world is ready to defend the rights of Afghans, particularly women and girls, in meaningful ways,” HRW said.

HRW recommended that the United Nations revisit a travel ban imposed by the Security Council in 1999 on several Taliban leaders in response of the group’s terrorist activities at the time — a measure that still affected 41 current members of the Taliban leadership, although it was partially suspended in 2019 to allow 14 Taliban figures to participate in peace talks.

“The Security Council will be reviewing these exemptions in June and has an opportunity to refocus the ban on specific Taliban leaders who have been implicated in serious rights violations,” HRW recommended.

Among the current Taliban leaders that should be banned from traveling HRW mentioned Abdul-Haq Wassiq, the chief of the group’s intelligence agency accused of extrajudicial executions and arresting and beating journalists; Muhammad Khalid Hanafi, head of the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice responsible for many of the restrictions on women and girls; and Haibatullah Akhundzada, the group’s top religious leader, who HRW says played “a decisive role in extending the ban on girls’ secondary education.”

HRW also recommended UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres visit Afghanistan in order to “redirect world attention to the situation, increase pressure on the Taliban to respect human rights, and prompt global solutions to end the dire humanitarian crisis.”

It also proposed an independent review of the UN mission in Afghanistan and its human rights monitoring to establish whether “it is equipped to perform its mandate.”

“Afghan women and girls are watching their rights vanish before their eyes. They need more from the world than concern. They need action,” HRW concluded.

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

  • HRW: Tougher Steps Needed Against Afghanistan’s Taliban
  • Video ‘Confession’ Of Popular Afghan YouTuber Prompts Outrage
Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule |

A Prisoner Affiliated With NRF Shot Dead by Taliban Fighters in Baghlan

9th June, 2022 · admin

8am: Sources say the Taliban have shot dead a member of the National Resistance Front (NRF) in Baghlan province. Local sources told Hasht-e Subh on Wednesday (8 June) that Taliban fighters shot dead a member of the NRF in the Tala-wa-Barfak district of Baghlan province on Tuesday. The Taliban also beheaded and mutilated four members of the NRF in the Andrab region in Baghlan province on Tuesday (June 7th). Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Baghlan, War Crime |

Practical work of TAPI project will begin in the next six months

9th June, 2022 · admin

Ariana: Noor Ahmad Islamjar, the governor of Herat, met with Turkmen Ambassador to Afghanistan Hoja Ovezov and Mohammad Murad Amanov, chief executive of the project in the province. During the meeting, the CEO of the TAPI project said that the practical work of the gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to Afghanistan will start in the next six months. In this meeting, Hoja Ovezov, Turkmen Ambassador to Kabul and Mohammad Murad Amanov, the executive director of the TAPI project was present. “We are waiting for the acquisition of the lands by Afghan government,” Mr Amanov announced the start of work on a gas transfer project from Turkmenistan to India in the next six months. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News | Tags: TAPI, Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline |

US engagement with Afghanistan isn’t over — and we need a new policy

9th June, 2022 · admin

The Hill: America still has a few tools to support its interests in Afghanistan but using them requires a focus beyond humanitarian relief and politically wishing the issue would disappear. Our interests are easily described: preventing attacks on the U.S. and its allies; supplying food and medical care to Afghans; supporting human rights, especially for women and girls; and facilitating the departure of American citizens and Afghans who worked with our government or directly supported the rights and principles we spent so much to advance. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Opinion/Editorial, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – June 9, 2022

9th June, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Forces Kill a Farmer in Shotul District, Panjshir Province

9th June, 2022 · admin

8am: Local sources report that a man has been shot dead by Taliban fighters in Panjshir province. The incident took place on Wednesday evening (June 8th) in the Roidara area of the Shotul district of Panjshir. According to sources, the victim’s name was Ibrahim, and he was killed by the Taliban while irrigating his trees and farmland. Click here to read more (external link).

Related: Taliban war on Panjshiris

  • Taliban arrested a Panjshiri journalist in Kabul
  • Taliban arrested Maiwand Wafa, a journalist and human rights activist
  • Taliban arbitrarily arrested a Panjshiri physician in Kabul
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Ethnic Issues, Security, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Panjshir |

Taliban Kidnaps a Married Woman from Ghazni, Takes Her to Urozgan

9th June, 2022 · admin

8am: Sources in Ghazni have reported that the Taliban rebels have abducted a married woman from the province and have taken her to Urozgan province. The woman was abducted by the Taliban a week ago, sources reported on Thursday. According to sources, the woman along with her child was taken from the village of Pashi in Malistan district of Ghazni to the village of Dahan-e Bum in Urozgan province. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Women, Security, Taliban | Tags: Ghazni, Kidnapping, Life under Taliban rule, Uruzgan |

Taliban Welcome, Others Criticize Return of Former Afghan Officials

9th June, 2022 · admin

Farooq Wardak

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
June 8, 2022

While many Afghans have desperately sought ways to flee the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan, a handful of former Afghan government officials returned to Kabul this week to be welcomed by the Taliban.

Farooq Wardak, former minister of education, is the highest-level former official to return.

“A person’s dignity is in his own country. … I feel dignified and proud in my country,” Wardak said, with two Taliban officials at his side, after landing Wednesday at Kabul airport.

Among the former officials who have returned to Afghanistan over the past 10 days are a former deputy minister of transportation, a director of the state-run electricity company, an official from the national security council, and even a Defense Ministry spokesman who for years called the Taliban “enemies of Afghanistan” during his routine Taliban casualty updates.

“Too many people — former ministers, governors and members of parliament — have reached out to us expressing their desire to return to their home country,” Abdul Haq Wasiq told VOA. Wasiq had been named spokesman for a commission the Taliban created last month to facilitate the return of prominent Afghans residing abroad.

The commission is headed by the Taliban’s minister of mining, while its public relations wing is run by Anas Haqqani, younger brother of Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani.

The Taliban have endeavored to make good use of each high-profile returnee.

In addition to filming the returnees at Kabul airport and then spreading short videos on social media, senior Taliban officials also met with them for photo opportunities.

“We welcome you, and we’re happy that today we’re in a peaceful environment [of brotherhood] in our own country,” Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi told a small group of returnees in a video released by the Taliban on Wednesday.

Search for legitimacy

More than nine months since seizing power and declaring Afghanistan an Islamic emirate, the Taliban have defied domestic and international calls to form an inclusive government, appointing a Taliban-only government and not appointing women to the Cabinet.

No country has officially recognized the Taliban’s de facto government so far.

“I think the Taliban are using this [the return of prominent Afghans] to their advantage because it sort of gives them some sort of internal legitimacy, where the return of these politicians proves that they are open to having an inclusive system,” Obaidullah Baheer, an Afghan activist, told VOA.

Taliban officials have not indicated whether the former Afghan officials will have a place in the Taliban government.

Taliban Supreme Leader Haibatullah Akhundzada, the ultraconservative cleric who has held the position since 2016 but has stayed out of public view, has dissolved Afghanistan’s elections commissions, and no political parties are registered in the country.

“They return to their homes, not to work for the government,” Wasiq, the Taliban spokesman, said of the latest returnees, adding that the Taliban gave them “immunity cards” to ensure they would not be detained because of their past jobs.

Some perceive the former government officials’ return as a declaration of allegiance to the Taliban’s emirate.

Criticism

The August 2021 collapse of the former Afghan government prompted an exodus of tens of thousands of Afghans, among them senior government officials, lawmakers, journalists and human rights activists.

While the United States, Canada and Germany have taken in thousands of Afghan refugees and asylum-seekers over the past several months, large numbers of Afghans remain scattered across several countries in the region, their residential status still uncertain.

Former President Ashraf Ghani has sought humanitarian asylum in the United Arab Emirates, but many of his top political allies and government officials have stayed in Turkey.

“I will not return to the terror village the Taliban have made for our people,” Rahmatullah Nabil, a former director of Afghanistan’s intelligence agency, told VOA.

Nabil alleges that some former officials have gone back to Afghanistan for personal business interests.

“They return to retain their properties and assets,” he said, adding that during the sudden collapse of the Afghan government, many individuals could not sell their properties or transfer their assets abroad.

Prominent women staying away

Taliban officials say all former officials are allowed to return to Afghanistan.

Some, however, challenge the invitation.

“What should I return to? The Taliban did not even allow me to enter my workplace where I served for more than 12 years,” said Asila Wardak, a former Afghan diplomat.

Now living in the U.S., Wardak told VOA she would have no means of earning a living under the Taliban.

“Will Taliban leaders like Muttaqi, Haqqani and others sit with us, women, to discuss our problems?”

The Taliban have fired all female government employees except health workers and teachers and have shut secondary schools for girls.

In late February, Zarifa Ghafari, the former mayor of Maidan Shahr, the capital of Wardak province, and a 2020 recipient of the International Women of Courage Award from the U.S. State Department, returned to Afghanistan, saying, “I want to be among my people and serve.”

Two weeks later, Ghafari left the country again and started criticizing the Taliban regime for its policies toward women.

Last month, Ghafari described Afghanistan as “a prison for women” and challenged a senior Taliban official to bring his own daughters to the country.

Related

  • Former Minister of Education Farooq Wardak aka Founder of “Ghost Schools” Returns to Afghanistan
Posted in Corruption, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban | Tags: Farooq Wardak |

‘Rubbing Salt Into Our Wounds’: In Pakistan, Opposition Grows To Impending Deal With Tehrik-e Taliban

8th June, 2022 · admin

TTP chief Noor Wali Mehsud

By Abubakar Siddique
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
June 8, 2022

Lawyer Fazal Khan says he feels furious following Pakistan’s ongoing peace negotiations with the hard-line militant group Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

His eldest son, eighth-grader Sahibzada Omar Khan, was killed in the TTP’s most horrific attack.

On December 16, 2014, a group of TTP militants stormed the Army Public School in Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province. They massacred Sahibzada and 131 other students. Fifteen teachers and staff were also killed in the attack, remembered as the worst terrorist atrocity in Pakistan’s 74-year history.

“This is like rubbing salt into our wounds,” he told RFE/RL. “This is like laughing at the sacrifices and martyrdom of innocent victims [of terrorist] attacks.”

Khan is not alone in questioning the mostly opaque talks, which senior Pakistani officials say are aimed at ending the TTP’s 14-year insurgency. A deal between Islamabad and the TTP now appears to be in sight after the group declared an indefinite cease-fire this month following months of parleys brokered by the Afghan Taliban.

Imminent Deal

Reports in the Pakistani media indicate that Islamabad has already agreed to release hundreds of detained and convicted TTP members and withdraw court cases against them.

Additionally, a large portion of the tens of thousands of Pakistani troops stationed in the erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) — where the TTP first emerged as an umbrella organization of small Taliban factions in 2007 — will be withdrawn. Islamabad has also agreed to implement Islamic Shari’a law in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Malakand region. The two sides have yet to agree on retracting democratic reforms and the merger of FATA into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and whether thousands of TTP militants can return with their arms and keep their organization intact.

But opposition to the imminent agreement is growing as victims of TTP violence question its logic. Others see it linked to the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan, which Islamabad helped by hosting the insurgency for nearly two decades. Pakistan’s several failed agreements with the TTP motivates some to warn of its potential negative fallout.

Yet senior officials are adamant that the TTP’s ongoing talks with a tribal council handpicked by the government will result in an agreement acceptable to both sides. Pakistani Information Minister Maryam Aurangzeb says the civilian administration and military support the talks.

“Whatever decision the negotiating committee will make will be eventually made with the approval of the government and the parliament,” she told journalists on June 4.

Many politicians, however, do not share her optimism.

“After imposing the Taliban on Afghanistan, the Pakistani security state wants to hand over the former tribal areas to force Pashtuns to live under neocolonial conditions,” former Senator Afrasiab Khattak told RFE/RL, referring to Pakistan’s alleged support for the Afghan Taliban, which allowed it to endure the U.S.-led war on terrorism and return to power last August, a little more than a year after it signed a peace deal with Washington.

Khattak sees Islamabad’s support for the Islamist Taliban as part of its strategy to shape Afghanistan’s politics and control the once-porous Pashtun borderlands straddling the two neighbors. The Pashtuns are the largest ethnic minority in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which has a population of some 40 million people.

Khattak survived a Taliban suicide bombing in 2008. Later that year and the next, he negotiated with the Pakistani Taliban — sometimes with their suicide bombers present in the room — as a senior adviser to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government.

But the TTP did not adhere to agreements made in 2008 and 2009, which paved the way for one of the most extensive military operations against the group in Swat Valley, one of the seven districts in Malakand. Rah-e Rast, as the military operation was formally known, displaced more than 3 million civilians.

Overall, more than 70,000 civilians and soldiers were killed and some 6 million displaced in Pakistan’s domestic war on terrorism that climaxed with operation Zarb-e Azb in the North Waziristan tribal district in 2014.

“Pashtuns are worried about a new terrorist onslaught leading to a second so-called war on terror leading to more killings and destruction,” Khattak said.

Other Taliban Factions

Zarb-e Azb drove the TTP into Afghanistan, where the group eventually regrouped by reintegrating splinter factions.

After the Taliban seized power in August, the TTP launched a new offensive, mainly targeting Pakistani troops in the tribal areas. Islamabad attempted to respond to the violence by targeting TTP hideouts inside Afghanistan. A recent UN report said some 4,000 of its members might be sheltering there.

Islamabad also won respite from TTP attacks as Pakistani officials pushed to reconcile the group through talks, which resulted in a monthlong cease-fire in November last year.

“They will only gain strength and will be able to run their militant campaign more effectively,” Mohsin Dawar, a young lawmaker who represents North Waziristan in the Pakistani parliament, said of the possible fallout from a peace deal.

Dawar told RFE/RL that an agreement with the TTP is unlikely to end all Taliban violence in Pakistan. A rival faction headed by Hafiz Gul Bahadur in North Waziristan has reportedly stepped up its attacks against Pakistani troops in the area. The Pakistani military claims to have killed several rebels in North Waziristan this month following attacks on security forces during the previous weeks.

“If the TTP foot soldiers won’t benefit from the impending deal, they are likely to switch over to Bahadur’s group or move on to join Daesh,” he said, referring to Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K) by its Arabic acronym. “These talks will have far-reaching and very dangerous results because violence will continue.”

In 2015, IS-K emerged from within the TTP, whose leaders and foot soldiers had forged close ties with Arab and Central Asian Islamist militants. But most of the group’s members have largely been loyal to the Afghan Taliban due to ideological, personal, and organizational ties.

Khan, now living in exile in Europe after surviving an assassination attempt in July 2020, is adamant about campaigning against what he says is the military’s shadowy dealing with the militants.

After years leading Army Public School parents in a campaign for justice for their slain children, he joined the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, a civil rights campaign, in 2018.

Over the years he has lodged several high-profile cases against powerful military and civilian officials for failing to provide security for people from terrorist violence.

“If the government goes ahead with this agreement, we will hasten our resistance,” he said.

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.
Posted in ISIS/DAESH, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Security, Taliban | Tags: Pashtuns in Pakistan, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, TTP chief Noor Wali Mehsud |
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