logo

Daily Updated Afghan News Service

  • Home
  • About
  • Opinion
  • Links to More News
  • Good Afghan News
  • Poll Results
  • Learn about Islam
  • Learn Dari (Afghan Persian/Farsi)

Recent Posts

  • Pakistani Airstrikes Force Taliban to Evacuate TTP Settlements in Ghazni May 14, 2026
  • Shoigu: 18,000 to 23,000 Armed Fighters Active in Afghanistan May 14, 2026
  • US aid cuts weaken Afghan media in exile, Human Rights Watch says May 14, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – May 14, 2026 May 14, 2026
  • Afghanistan falls to Uzbekistan in CAFA U20 Championship May 13, 2026
  • Increase in Armed Robberies Sparks Concern Among Kabul Shopkeepers May 13, 2026
  • UN says 74% of Afghans cannot meet basic needs May 13, 2026
  • EU invites Taliban members to discuss Afghan migrant returns May 13, 2026
  • Khalilzad accuses Pakistan of playing ‘double game’ amid Iran-US tensions May 13, 2026
  • Tolo News in Dari – May 13, 2026 May 13, 2026

Categories

  • Afghan Children
  • Afghan Sports News
  • Afghan Women
  • Afghanistan Freedom Front
  • Al-Qaeda
  • Anti-Government Militants
  • Anti-Taliban Resistance
  • AOP Reports
  • Arab-Afghan Relations
  • Art and Culture
  • Australia-Afghanistan Relations
  • Book Review
  • Britain-Afghanistan Relations
  • Canada-Afghanistan Relations
  • Censorship
  • Central Asia
  • China-Afghanistan Relations
  • Civilian Injuries and Deaths
  • Corruption
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Drone warfare
  • Drugs
  • Economic News
  • Education
  • Elections News
  • Entertainment News
  • Environmental News
  • Ethnic Issues
  • EU-Afghanistan Relations
  • Everyday Life
  • France-Afghanistan Relations
  • Germany-Afghanistan Relations
  • Haqqani Network
  • Health News
  • Heroism
  • History
  • Human Rights
  • India-Afghanistan Relations
  • Interviews
  • Iran-Afghanistan Relations
  • ISIS/DAESH
  • Islamophobia News
  • Japan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Landmines
  • Media
  • Misc.
  • Muslims and Islam
  • NATO-Afghanistan
  • News in Dari (Persian/Farsi)
  • NRF – National Resistance Front
  • Opinion/Editorial
  • Other News
  • Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Peace Talks
  • Photos
  • Political News
  • Reconstruction and Development
  • Refugees and Migrants
  • Russia-Afghanistan Relations
  • Science and Technology
  • Security
  • Society
  • Tajikistan-Afghanistan Relations
  • Taliban
  • Traffic accidents
  • Travel
  • Turkey-Afghanistan Relations
  • UN-Afghanistan Relations
  • Uncategorized
  • US-Afghanistan Relations
  • Uzbekistan-Afghanistan Relations

Archives

Dari/Pashto Services

  • Bakhtar News Agency
  • BBC Pashto
  • BBC Persian
  • DW Dari
  • DW Pashto
  • VOA Dari
  • VOA Pashto

Afghanistan’s Taliban Orders Women To Wear Burqa Coverings In Public

7th May, 2022 · admin

By RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
May 7, 2022

Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities have ordered all women to cover their faces, the latest in a series of restrictions that have drawn criticism from many Afghans and the international community.

The decree, announced at a news conference in the capital, Kabul, on May 7, calls for women to only show their eyes and recommends they wear the head-to-toe burqa.

A spokesman for the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice read out the decree and said it was issued in the name of the group’s supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada.

Failure to comply will result in a woman’s father or closest male relative being reprimanded, or imprisoned, or fired from government jobs, the decree said.

“We want our sisters to live with dignity and safety,” Khalid Hanafi, acting minister for the ministry, was quoted as saying.

Head scarves are common for most Afghan women, but in urban areas such as Kabul, many do not cover their faces.

One female activist in Kabul, who is a lawyer and does not want to be identified for security reasons, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi that Afghan women used to wear the hijab and were Muslims before the Taliban.

“They (Afghans) used to be Muslims, whether they are Taliban in power or not. Unfortunately, the Taliban are always trying to get concessions from women,” she said. “Sometimes they debate about women’s education and sometimes they talk about hijab for women. But they have forgotten the basic and important problems of hunger, poverty, and many other things in Afghanistan.”

Girls have been banned from school beyond Grade 6 in most of the country since the Taliban’s return last August.

In March, authorities ordered girls high schools closed on the morning they were scheduled to open. But in Kabul, private schools and universities have operated uninterrupted.

The United States and other nations have cut development aid and enforced strict banking sanctions since the Taliban takeover amid the sudden, chaotic withdrawal of U.S. forces.

With reporting by AP and Reuters

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

  • New Decree on Hijab: Taliban to Punish Girls’ Parents for Not Obeying Hijab Decrees
  • Taliban Plan Meeting of Clerics to Decide on Girls’ Secondary Education
Posted in Afghan Women, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Burqa |

Concerns Raised Over the Resurgence of COVID-19

7th May, 2022 · admin

8am: The Afghan-Japan Hospital in Kabul announced a resurgence of coronavirus cases in Afghanistan, adding that not having access to identification kits has posed serious challenges. According to the officials of the hospital, more than 70 positive cases of COVID-19 have been recorded in the country in the past 24 hours. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Afghanistan |

The Liberation Front Claims to Have Killed 5 Taliban in Paktia

6th May, 2022 · admin

8am: In a newsletter, the National Liberation Front has claimed that its forces have killed five Taliban rebels in a guerrilla attack in Paktia province. In another report today, the Liberation Front also claimed that its forces had targeted Mullah Hafizullah Badr, the Taliban’s intelligence chief in western Kabul, in the Bagh-e-Dawood of the Company area. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Taliban Cuts off the Telecommunication Antennas of Abshar, Panjshir – The reason for the disruption of telecommunications networks is clashes between their rebels and the National Resistance Front forces.
Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Security, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Liberation Front, National Resistance Front (NRF), Paktia |

Pakistan Rules Out Refugee Status for Afghan Asylum-Seekers

6th May, 2022 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
May 6, 2022

ISLAMABAD — The Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan has deteriorated economic and humanitarian conditions in the war-torn nation, prompting tens of thousands of people to cross into Pakistan seeking asylum and a resettled status abroad.

Pakistani officials say that since the Taliban regained power in Kabul last August more than 100,000 urban Afghans, mostly well-off and educated professionals, have arrived in the country on valid visas.

They are largely vulnerable Afghans seeking to move to the United States and other Western countries under refugee resettlement programs. Most of them have ended up in hotels, commercial guesthouses and apartment buildings in and around the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

The Afghan migrants are now facing multiple problems because of their extended stay in Pakistan. They allege delays in processing their resettlement applications by relevant Western embassies, a lack of help from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees office in Islamabad, and issues related to extending their Pakistani visas.

Some of the migrant families want the UNHCR to register them as refugees. They say they don’t want to return to their native country, citing the Taliban’s ban on girls’ education and other restrictions on women.

“I have applied for a P-2 case. Generally, the process is going very, very slow,” said one Afghan asylum-seeker. The man, who declined to provide his name for security reasons, says he is a member of the Hazara Shi’ite minority community, which has been repeatedly attacked by the Islamic State terrorist group in Afghanistan.

“We are waiting for an email either from the RSC (Resettlement Support Center) or from the U.S. Embassy,” the man said.

“My son and my daughter-in-law are serving American army forces, which is a great threat,” he said, noting he himself was an employee of a foreign media group’s office in Kabul.

Educated Afghans and minorities flee

The United States’ Priority 2, or P-2, program is meant to help relocate at-risk Afghans such as journalists and rights activists who are otherwise ineligible for a decade-old U.S. special immigrant visa program open to interpreters and others who worked with American troops in Afghanistan.

Islamic State has stepped up attacks against Hazara schools and places of worship since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan nearly nine months ago. The violence has killed scores people over the past few weeks alone.

Up to 10% of Afghanistan’s estimated 40 million people are Hazara. The community is considered the most persecuted group and is discriminated against by many in the Sunni-majority country.

Fatima Sadaat is also waiting to hear about her P-2 visa application. The young female Afghan asylum-seeker tells VOA she used to work as a news presenter at one of Afghanistan’s TV stations but lost her job after the Taliban captured the country.

Sadaat was invited to attend a seminar in Pakistan several months ago to discuss issues facing women under Afghanistan’s new Islamist rulers.

“I used to broadcast anti-Taliban news and I knew sooner or later they would target me and possibly kill me for my work. That’s why I decided against going back to Afghanistan,” she said.

Sadaat urged Pakistani authorities to allow her and other Afghans to live comfortably in the country by relaxing visa restrictions and demanded Western embassies speedily address their resettlement requests.

“I can understand the world attention has shifted on Ukraine. But I hope the issue of Afghanistan is not forgotten in the process because security and human rights conditions in my country have even worsened after the Taliban takeover.”

Pakistan, which already hosts at least 3 million Afghans, both refugees and illegal economic migrants, announced last year that it would not accept new refugees from Afghanistan and tightened border controls to block illegal entrants after the Taliban takeover.

Islamabad’s ambassador to Kabul, Mansoor Ahmed Khan, told VOA that every day the mission is issuing 700 to 1,000 multiple entry visas to Afghans intending to travel to Islamabad for business reasons, for medical treatment and for visa interviews in American and Canadian embassies, as well as other Western embassies.

“We are issuing visas to Afghans more liberally than any other neighboring country or any other country in the world. We are doing so to help address Afghans’ humanitarian concerns,” Khan said.

“But if they (Afghans) want their status to be converted into a refugee status, that will not happen nor will we allow it,” he stressed. “We simply don’t want an increase in refugees.”

The exodus has allegedly encouraged corruption and bribes both in Kabul and Islamabad as Afghans seek to secure or extend Pakistani visas.

Many asylum-seekers admit they prefer to pay bribes to get their visas renewed in Pakistan because they don’t want to go back to Afghanistan. The say the trip would be more costly and it would expose them to questions from the Taliban, who have been accused of blocking the departure of educated and skilled Afghans from the country.

P-1 option

Vulnerable Afghans who do not meet the P-2 criteria may be referred under the pre-existing Priority 1, or P-1, refugee program. However, U.S. officials say the application process in all cases can take 14 to 18 months or more.

Qaisar Khan Afridi, the UNHCR spokesperson in Islamabad, told VOA his office is working with local authorities to help address the challenges facing the Afghan community.

“We are currently discussing with the government of Pakistan the way forward on registration and documentation of asylum-seekers,” Afridi said. “There might be therefore delays in the process, which we systematically convey through our communication with communities.”

Afridi explained that his organization operates “hotlines and dedicated email accounts” to respond to Afghans “facing serious risks and/or having vulnerabilities” that require support from UNHCR or its partners.

He stressed, however, not every Afghan individual or family may qualify for resettlement in a third country because the program is reserved for refugees “with significant protection needs and vulnerabilities.”

“Some countries have announced opportunities for Afghan nationals who have worked or been affiliated with those countries to apply for permission to travel to those countries,” Afridi said.

“These programs are established by those countries and UNHCR does not refer people to the programs or process applications,” he said in response to allegations his office was not providing timely and adequate assistance to Afghan asylum-seekers.

The last U.S.-led foreign troops withdrew from Afghanistan on Aug. 30, 2021, ending nearly two decades of war with the Taliban.

Although Washington and its allies evacuated more than 124,000 at-risk people from Kabul after the Taliban takeover, tens of thousands of other vulnerable Afghans who were left behind are struggling to find a pathway to safety.

Pakistan also helped the U.S. and other Western countries to evacuate thousands of at-risk Afghans for their onward journey to the country of their resettlement. Last month, a group of about 300 Afghans was flown out of Pakistan to Germany while thousands more who worked for German forces in Afghanistan remain behind, said officials in Islamabad.

The Taliban’s ban on girls’ education has added to the problems of stranded Afghan families as their children are still unable to resume classes.

Shapoor Yousaf, a medical doctor, left Afghanistan with his family three months ago and has applied for a P-1 case at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad. He said he had missed the U.S.-run evacuation flights out of Kabul in August because the chaotic situation at the time prevented them from reaching the city airport.

Yousaf, a father of three, said he was heading the drug demand reduction national program at the Afghan health ministry and was running partnership projects with the U.S. Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs.

“There is no delay from the U.S. side but the UNHCR is taking time to process our case. We request the UNHCR to speed up our application process because our Pakistani visas will soon expire and we may face legal issues here,” said the Afghan doctor.

Yousaf explained that before leaving Afghanistan, he sold his vehicle and is using that money to pay for the rent and other expenses. His wife is also a doctor and they have two sons and a 10-year-old daughter. One of his sons graduated from a law college and the other was studying at a medical university in Kabul.

“My elder son is jobless right now. My younger son nor my daughter can resume education because neither one have enough money to fund it nor our current status in Pakistan allows them to attend a local institution.”

Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Refugees and Migrants, Taliban | Tags: Asylum, Escape from the Taliban |

Two Former Soldiers Mysteriously Killed in Urozgan

6th May, 2022 · admin

8am: Sources in Deh Rawood district of Urozgan province have reported to Hasht-e Subh that anonymous armed individuals have mysteriously murdered two former soldiers. It is said that the victims were father and son. Despite the general amnesty announced by the Taliban, dozens of the former security forces have been mysteriously arrested, tortured, killed, and have been through field trials. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Human Rights, Security, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Taliban Amnesty Violation, Taliban Security Failure, Uruzgan |

Cultivation of Asafoetida Plant Increases in Kunduz

6th May, 2022 · admin

Tolo News: In recent years, many farmers in Kunduz province have started cultivating Asafoetida. Farmers in Kunduz say that asafoetida, or “hing” is a medicinal plant and its income is more profitable than other products. They add that if the government cooperates with them, the production of hing and the export of this plant abroad will increase. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Health News | Tags: Asafoetida (hing), Kunduz, Medicine |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – May 6, 2022

6th May, 2022 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Calls on the World to Help Flood Victims

6th May, 2022 · admin

8am: Following the heavy rainfalls and floods in several provinces of Afghanistan, the Taliban Acting Foreign Ministry has called on the world and international organizations to help the affected people and the victims. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Environmental News, Taliban | Tags: Flood, Taliban government failure |

NRF have captured 10 Villages in Versaj, Takhar Province

5th May, 2022 · admin

8am: Currently, the battle line between the NRF forces and the Taliban is in the villages of Band Barq and Khanqa in Versaj district, as reported. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Security, Taliban | Tags: Afghan resistance against Taliban, Takhar |

IS-K Attacks Puncture Taliban’s Narrative About Establishing ‘Security’ In Afghanistan

5th May, 2022 · admin

Abubakar Siddique
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
May 5, 2022

The Taliban has repeatedly boasted of “defeating” its rival, the Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K) militant group, and bragged about establishing complete “security” in Afghanistan in recent months.

But a spate of high-profile attacks claimed by IS-K militants in recent weeks has punctured the Taliban’s narrative that it has restored law and order in the war-wracked country.

Since seizing power in August 2021, the Taliban has waged a ruthless crackdown against IS-K militants and their followers. But IS-K has remained resilient and has launched regular attacks on Taliban fighters and officials.

Experts say IS-K is seeking to undermine the Taliban-led government and expose its failure to provide security. The Taliban has long portrayed itself as a stabilizing force that can bring peace to Afghanistan. In the 1990s, during its first stint in power, the Taliban used brute force and repression to pacify large parts of the country following a devastating civil war.

“The IS-K’s primary aim is to prevent the Taliban from transitioning into a [functional] government from an insurgency,” said Abdul Sayed, a Sweden-based researcher who tracks IS-K. The Taliban has struggled to make that transition as it grapples with a freefalling economy, international isolation, and widening internal rifts. IS-K attacks have further challenged the Taliban’s hard-line rule. “The Taliban cannot formulate a comprehensive counterterrorism policy as long as they operate like an insurgency and fail to grow into a government acceptable to Afghans,” he said.

‘Defeated And Suppressed’

Since seizing power on August 15, the Taliban has constantly downplayed the threat posed by IS-K, which first emerged in 2015.

“Without doubt, Daesh has been defeated and suppressed,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi last month, using an Arabic acronym for IS-K. Mujahid said IS-K’s bombings of mosques and schools were “symptoms of its weakness and defeat.”

But a string of deadly IS-K attacks in recent weeks, mostly targeting religious minorities, have busted the Taliban’s claim.

IS-K claimed responsibility for an April 22 blast at a mosque and religious school in the northern province of Kunduz that killed at least 33 people. The day before, IS-K said it was behind an attack on a Shi’ite mosque in the northern city of Mazar-e Sharif that killed at least 12 worshippers and wounded scores more.

Several other major incidents, including a bombing at a mosque in Kabul that killed up to 50 people on April 29, have gone unclaimed, although they bear all the hallmarks of previous IS-K attacks.

Sayed says IS-K militants are employing urban warfare and guerilla tactics to sow chaos. “These attacks are aimed at proving that the Taliban’s seizure of power has been a failure,” he said.

In the first four months of this year, IS-K has carried out at least 119 attacks in Afghanistan, up from 39 during the same period in 2021, according to a recent report published by Sayed. The attacks included suicide bombings, assassinations, and ambushes on security posts.

Of those, 96 targeted Taliban officials or fighters, compared with only two in the same period in 2020, Sayed adds. He says that marks a significant change from last year, when IS-K was primarily targeting civilians.

On April 24, IS-K claimed to have killed Mawlawi Abdul Fattah, the head of the department of petroleum and mining in the northeastern province of Badakhshan. Valle Riccardo, an Italian researcher tracking IS-K, says Fattah was among at least a dozen Taliban fighters and officials who have been targeted in recent months.

In November, IS-K militants stormed a military hospital in Kabul, killing at least 20 people, including a prominent Taliban commander. A month earlier, IS-K militants targeted a memorial service for Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid’s mother, killing several people.

Nationwide Hunt

Many IS-K fighters are former members of the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant group, which was thrown into disarray and driven out of its bases in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal belt by a massive military operation in 2014. Disgruntled members of the TTP, also known as the Pakistani Taliban, founded the IS-K in eastern Afghanistan in early 2015.

But IS-K soon found itself fighting turf wars with the Afghan Taliban. Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan, the rivalry has intensified.

The Afghan militants have waged a nationwide hunt for IS-K members and even targeted the country’s small Salafi minority to curb alleged support for the group from among its members.

Experts say IS-K remains a key security challenge for the Taliban.

Zia Ur Rehman, an independent Pakistani journalist who tracks militant groups in Afghanistan and Pakistan, says IS-K is aiming to weaken “the Taliban’s claims that they are a force of stability in Afghanistan and the region.”

“They are also trying to use their status as the most potent militant group operating against the Taliban inside Afghanistan,” 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, Security, Taliban | Tags: Taliban Security Failure |
Previous Posts
Next Posts

Subscribe to the Afghanistan Online YouTube Channel

---

---

---

Get Yours!

Peace be with you

Afghan Dresses

© Afghan Online Press
  • About
  • Links To More News
  • Opinion
  • Poll