Tag: afghanistan taliban

  • Taliban prohibit ladies from attending Eid celebrations in Afghanistan’s two provinces

    By India Today World Desk: The Taliban have banned ladies from attending Eid celebrations in two provinces of Afghanistan. The latest announcement bought right here as a result of the group continues to impose harsh restrictions on ladies beneath its rule.

    According to 2 comparable notifications issued, ladies have been prohibited “to go out in groups during the days of Eid-ul-Fitr” on Friday in Takhar (northeast) and Baghlan (north) provinces, Afghanistan’s Khaama News Agency reported.

    The decree moreover mentioned that it is compulsory to say Hibatullah Akhundzada, the Taliban’s reclusive supreme chief, in Eid prayers.

    A reproduction of the notification issued by the regime was tweeted by a contract journalist named Natiq Malikzada.

    In a model new decree on the occasion of the upcoming Eid, the Taliban have ordered that #ladies shouldn’t allowed to journey or stroll exterior in the midst of the times of Eid.

    The decree moreover states that it is compulsory to say Hibatullah Akhundzada’s establish in Eid prayers. #Afghanistan pic.twitter.com/Ycq8fMZXzq
    — Natiq Malikzada (@natiqmalikzada) April 19, 2023

    ALSO READ | Afghanistan’s female-run radio station shut for collaborating in music all through Ramadan

    Earlier this month, Taliban prohibited the entry of households and ladies into consuming locations with gardens or inexperienced areas inside the northwestern province of Herat. The switch bought right here due to numerous complaints from religious college students and most of the people regarding the mixing of genders in such areas, in accordance with an official.

    The outside consuming ban is simply related to establishments in Herat, the place such premises are open for males. The curbs are in place as ladies shouldn’t sporting the hijab (Islamic headband) appropriately, in accordance with authorities.

    ALSO READ | Women’s rights not priority, says Taliban month after coaching ban

    In August 2021, the Taliban seized power following the withdrawal of US-led forces from Afghanistan that ended 20 years of battle. Since then, the group tightened controls over the freedom of girls and ladies. These strikes prompted widespread condemnation by nations and worldwide organisations.

    Girls previous sixth grade and ladies have been barred from coming into lecture rooms and universities respectively.

    Women are moreover prohibited from taking on job alternate options, along with these on the United Nations. They are moreover not allowed to go to public areas akin to gyms and parks.

  • Afghans adrift on US ‘lily pad’ in Kosovo

    Two weeks after the Taliban reclaimed Kabul in 2021, diplomats and US troopers in Kosovo welcomed with open arms and newly constructed lodging Afghans who had been evacuated due to their work with the United States and allied governments.

    Camp Liya, constructed alongside the US Army base Camp Bondsteel, would briefly be their residence — a “lily pad,” they had been advised — whereas Washington organized their resettlement within the United States or a 3rd nation.

    “We are honored to be able to help Afghan refugees who worked for NATO,” Kosovan Prime Minister Albin Kurti mentioned on August 29, 2021, greeting the primary arrivals on the airport. “They left their homes and their country in desperation. But we will do everything to make sure that they will be safe, secure here.”

    John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman on the time, mentioned the settlement signed with Kosovo pledged the US to relocate Afghans which might be housed at within the camp “to the United States or a third country within 365 days.”

    Liya lingers on

    Fast-forward — or for the residents, slow-crawl ahead — to as we speak. The plan for Camp Liya to be dismantled inside a yr has fallen by the wayside. Though many lots of of Afghans did cross by rapidly, receiving US visas or provides to dwell abroad, others are caught there after receiving both a adverse resolution from US authorities or no resolution in any respect.

    “Some people are depressed; some people have psychological problems,” an Afghan man who had been evacuated advised DW, asking that he not be recognized due to safety dangers. “They told us that we would be here for a couple of months, but we are here for almost one year. After eight months they said: ‘You are not eligible to go to America.’ We ask them what’s the reason. They didn’t tell us.”

    The long-term residents might have been advised that they had been company initially, however this man mentioned now it felt like a jail. He mentioned residents weren’t allowed to depart the bottom except they provide up their proper to come back again. They can’t work to earn cash to ship again to their households, who in lots of instances weren’t allowed to be evacuated with them, so he’s frightened his kids are going hungry.

    After reflecting, he mentioned the knowledge vacuum made the state of affairs really feel worse than jail.

    “A prisoner can have access to his case, and he can ask about his case, why he is here, for how long he will be in detention,” the person mentioned. “If we ask that, they don’t give us any reason why we are in this camp and for how long.”

    Treatment ‘just shocking’

    Earlier this summer time exasperation on the bottom boiled over and evacuees staged a protest, holding indicators indicators saying “women and children are suffering” and “we want justice.”

    Most of the individuals whose visa requests have been rejected don’t have any attorneys to press their instances with the US authorities. One who does is former Afghan intelligence chief Mohammad Arif Sarwari. He was among the many first Afghans to coordinate with US forces once they invaded Afghanistan after 9/11.

    Back then Julie Sirrs was a protection intelligence analyst with the US Department of Defense, and have become acquainted with Sarwari whereas working in Afghanistan. Later in her profession, she turned an lawyer. When she realized that his life was at risk with the return of the Taliban final yr, Sirrs determined she’d repay Sarwari his help of many years in the past and symbolize him as he sought resettlement within the United States.

    “He protected my life and that of many other Americans,” Sirrs advised DW. “He was the primary contact for the CIA team that went in immediately post-9/11. I don’t think there is any individual in Afghanistan who did more than Mr. Sarwari did to help the United States.”

    Sirrs is puzzled that her consumer has been rejected for a US visa and pissed off that she is given little or no details about his case.

    “I think the treatment is highly improper, especially in cases like my client’s, who provided tremendous assistance at great risk to his life,” she mentioned.

    “I understand there are others in a similar position to him in the camp and it’s just shocking to me, the very poor treatment they’ve been getting through this process. No one disputes the need for appropriate vetting. But in some cases, for those individuals who are still in the camp, it seems to be a process that has gone wrong in some way.”

    Asked what could be their destiny, State Department Spokesman Ned Price had little to share. “There is a small number [of evacuees] still there who are undergoing additional vetting,” he mentioned on August 16. “We’ve been able to clear a number of them already. But, again, each vetting process is done on a case-by-case basis, and that’s ongoing for those who remain there.”

    US strikeout stigma

    Seeking a 3rd nation for evacuated Afghans turns into infinitely tougher as soon as US officers have decided that they don’t seem to be eligible to dwell within the United States.

    “The first thing other countries do tend to assume is that there may be some security issue,” Sirrs mentioned, including that she doesn’t consider there’s any such concern with Sarwari. He lately was in a position to negotiate a departure from Camp Liya to a different location to await a resettlement supply, however, she mentioned, no nation has provided to take him in.

    Going again to Afghanistan would imply sure demise for Sarwari, she mentioned, as it could for a lot of others at Camp Liya.

    That leaves the issue in Kosovo’s lap. One yr after he promised the brand new arrivals security and safety, Kosovo’s Prime Minister Kurti, visiting Brussels, acknowledged his authorities had agreed to let the US blow its deadline of August 29, 2022 to have Camp Liya disbanded. He didn’t reply on to this reporter’s query of whether or not the individuals who stay in Camp Liya might be resettled inside Kosovo.

    “It’s a humanitarian duty to help refugees who had to flee,” Kurti mentioned. “On the other hand, it is duty toward our allies and partners and friends — first of all the United States — to help when they are in need. And we will continue to do so.”

    Continuing the established order is simply the alternative of what Camp Liya’s left-behind inhabitants need.

  • Pakistan dismisses Afghan minister’s allegation of permitting US to make use of its airspace for drone assaults

    Pakistan has rejected allegations by the Taliban’s performing defence minister about using its airspace by the US for drone assaults in Afghanistan, saying his remarks had been “highly regrettable” and defied the “norms of responsible diplomatic conduct.”

    The allegations had been made by Mohammad Yaqoob on Sunday, practically a month after al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri was killed by a missile fired from a CIA drone towards his hideout in central Kabul on July 31.

    The assault was the primary identified strike by the US on a goal in Afghanistan since Washington withdrew its forces from the war-torn nation on August 31 final 12 months.

    Yaqoob instructed reporters in Kabul that US drones have been coming into Afghanistan through Pakistan’s airspace.

    Foreign Office Spokesperson Asim Iftikhar Ahmed mentioned in an in a single day assertion that Pakistan has famous, with deep concern, the allegation by the Acting Defence Minister of Afghanistan concerning using Pakistan’s air area within the US counter-terrorism drone operation in Afghanistan.

    “In the absence of any evidence, as acknowledged by the Afghan Minister himself, such conjectural allegations are highly regrettable and defy the norms of responsible diplomatic conduct,” he mentioned.

    Pakistan reaffirmed its perception within the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states and mentioned that it condemns terrorism in all its kinds and manifestations.

    “We urge the Afghan interim authorities to ensure the fulfilment of international commitments made by Afghanistan not to allow the use of its territory for terrorism against any country,” the spokesperson mentioned.

    Pakistani authorities have beforehand denied involvement within the US drone strike it carried out in Kabul that killed 71-year-old Zawahiri.
    Border tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have risen because the Taliban seized energy final 12 months, with Islamabad claiming militant teams are finishing up common assaults from the neighbouring nation.

  • Taliban accuses Pakistan of permitting U.S. drones to make use of its airspace

    The Taliban’s performing defence minister on Sunday stated Pakistan had allowed American drones to make use of its airspace to entry Afghanistan, a cost Pakistan has lately denied following a U.S. air strike in Kabul.

    Acting Minister of Defence Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob instructed reporters at a information convention in Kabul that American drones have been getting into Afghanistan by way of Pakistan.

    “According to our information the drones are entering through Pakistan to Afghanistan, they use Pakistan’s airspace, we ask Pakistan, don’t use your airspace against us,” he stated.

    Pakistan’s overseas ministry didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark.

    Pakistani authorities have denied involvement in or superior information of a drone strike the United States stated it carried out in Kabul in July that killed al Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri.

    Yaqoob’s feedback might exacerbate stress between the neighbouring nations at a time when the Afghan Taliban is mediating talks between Pakistan and a Pakistani Taliban militant group. Afghanistan additionally depends closely on commerce with Pakistan because the nation experiences an financial disaster.

    The Taliban stated it’s investigating the July air strike and that it has not discovered the Al Qaeda chief’s physique.

  • Away from crises at residence, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan kick off Asia Cup 2022

    The phrases of Sri Lanka captain Dasun Shanaka rang loud and clear forward of Asia Cup 2022. The island nation was imagined to host the match however the sport hasn’t been the vortex of late for the nation going through the worst financial disaster in its historical past. Cricket although has continued concurrently within the warmth of all of it.

    When 1000’s took to the streets for protests condemning former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa for mismanagement of the nation’s funds, a couple of lots of climbed the partitions of the Galle Fort, just some metres away from a Test match that includes gamers who wore their crest. The gamers, as Australia captain Steve Smith would later agree, may hear them ‘but it didn’t get to anybody or play a component in what was taking place out right here’. And so, the cricket continued. A month and a half later, simply as Shanaka was addressing the media in Dubai forward of the match, a delegation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is on their go to to Sri Lanka to proceed discussions with the authorities on financial and monetary reforms and insurance policies. But cricket will proceed. Almost as if it has to.

    “Winning matches is the most thrilling thing for Sri Lankan people,” Shanaka added through the interplay.

    Some 3,000 km away from residence, Sri Lanka Cricket are nonetheless internet hosting the fifteenth version of Asia’s continental cricket match. It’s barely the identical and the skipper is aware of it.

    “Had this tournament happened in Sri Lanka, it would have favored us as the ground support would have been good,” he mentioned. “Playing in home conditions always has an advantage.”

    Facing them within the Asia Cup opener can be a staff whose instance was cited by Hillary Clinton, former US Secretary of State in 2010.

    “I might suggest that if we are searching for a model of how to meet tough international challenges with skill, dedication and teamwork, we need only look to the Afghan national cricket team,” Clinton mentioned, standing alongside the then Afghan President Hamid Karzai within the White House. “For those of you who don’t follow cricket, which is most of the Americans, suffice it to say that Afghanistan did not even have a cricket team a decade ago. And last month, the team made it to the World Twenty20 championships featuring the best teams in the world.”

    The echo of Clinton’s phrases has gone silent in 2022. The nationwide males’s cricket staff has certainly gone from taking part in world match qualifiers to being an automated qualifier however the phrases on the crux of that white home gathering have barely stood the take a look at of time.

    “As we look toward a responsible, orderly transition in the international combat mission in Afghanistan, we will not abandon the Afghan people. Our civilian commitment will remain long into the future.”

    In 2022, as Afghanistan males’s cricket staff go into their first Asia Cup fixture, it has been simply over one yr since the Taliban took management of Afghanistan. With ladies’s cricket and the nationwide staff being compelled out by the regime, the boys’s facet is among the few standing teams within the leisure phase. Barely, nevertheless.

    Dr Sarah Fane, referred to as ‘mother of Afghan cricket’ as a result of her NGO “Afghan Connection”, based in 2011, aimed to remodel younger lives by training and sport. The charity funded the constructing of 46 colleges in rural Afghanistan for 75,000 children and she or he acquired an OBE in 2013. They constructed cricket pitches in colleges, held tournaments, supplied clothes and package and ran teaching camps.

    She give up the nation in 2020 after she began to get threats that they must begin paying taxes to the Taliban, and she or he didn’t wish to drag her donors into that scenario.

    Fane, referred to as ‘mother of Afghan cricket’ as a result of her NGO “Afghan Connection”, based in 2011, aimed to remodel younger lives by training and sport. (Photo: MCC basis)

    A yr earlier than that, she had spoken to this newspaper in regards to the impact of cricket in Afghanistan. “Eight million kids are in school, seven million more than (in) 2001. I haven’t faced any problems with parents sending boys to play cricket. With girls, yes; it’s a conservative society but hopefully things are changing. Kids play cricket everywhere in the country – streets, grounds, front of houses, everywhere. It’s a national obsession. Great source of joy for everyone. Afghanistan doesn’t have popstars or politicians to celebrate. Cricketers are the heroes.”

    She recounted a “most emotional” story from 2009 that also offers her goosebumps.  The Afghanistan nationwide staff had come to a college for a camp, funded by MCC. “Jalalabad was flooded that day. Rickshaws looked like bizarre half-submerged fish as they battled through waters,” says Sarah. The children didn’t know they’d be there and I can nonetheless bear in mind their faces. It was unimaginable, actually. I’m amazed that in some way in my life as a physician I ended up with cricket and Afghanistan. I by no means even dreamt about it.”

    But of late, that dream is drying up. “The passion for the game has increased but the flow of money has started to dry up,”  Asadullah Khan, a former Afghanistan Cricket Board selector, had mentioned in a current interview to Cricinfo.“… corporate sponsorships for the game have come down. ICC funds are not coming directly, hence money is an issue. ACB is still surviving but [we’re] not sure how long it can be sustained.”

    It is with all this taking place that Mohammad Nabi will lead the staff in UAE. And they could as effectively win the primary one.

    Not simply on paper, Afghanistan stands even vs Sri Lanka on floor

    It was in 2014 that Afghanistan made their first look within the Asia Cup, the identical yr when Sri Lanka gained their final. Imagine telling both of these groups that in eight years time the 2 can be robust to choose from within the match’s opener. But that is the place we’re.

    Since the final T20 World Cup, Afghanistan have gained six of their 10 T20Is throughout three bilaterals, beating Zimbabwe and taking part in a stalemate in opposition to Bangladesh within the course of. While it must be taken under consideration that Afghanistan extra usually compete in opposition to groups decrease in rating than Sri Lanka, the latter have gained just one T20I sequence since 2020. That, got here in opposition to a second string Indian facet, which barely managed to place an XI on area after seven of their gamers examined optimistic for Covid-19 submit a win within the first of the three matches. For what it’s value, Afghanistan’s win-loss ratio since 2020 is 1.857 in comparison with Sri Lanka’s 0.416.

    Powered by globetrotting T20 riches, the Afghan facet in 2022 have a number of gamers to win them video games within the format. Rashid Khan continues to be the massive title within the squad, particularly after the brand new replace of no bones cricket pictures he executes with the bat. But gone are the times when it was all about him. Mujeeb ur Rahman is an ready associate below the spin column. Together, the duo have a complete of 89 wickets in between them at economic system serving lower than 6.50. Spin, hasn’t even been essentially the most profitable outlet for the staff with the pacers choosing a wicket extra (56) in all T20Is since 2021.

    Their batting is perhaps the place the five-time Asian champions damage Afghanistan. Openers Hazratullah Zazai and Rahmanullah Gurbaz have solely scored two fifties in 9 innings because the 2021 World Cup. There has been an growing reliance on the staff’s main scorer from final yr’s match, Najibullah Zadran, who has additionally been Afghanistan’s main run getter within the format since. Rashid generally is a biggie decrease down the batting order however the opposition can kill the sport if the highest order collapses early.

    Game day all set and able to go 🇦🇫vs🇱🇰
    #asiacup #dubai #afghanistan #gameday #snakeshot pic.twitter.com/RljJIwrhxo

    — Rashid Khan (@rashidkhan_19) August 27, 2022

    For Sri Lanka, spin is a key phrase with the duo of Wanindu Hasaranga and Maheesh Theekshana filling eight off the 20 overs with high quality. Just like their opponents, Sri Lanka do have critical batting points that haven’t been addressed pre Asia Cup. Openers Pathum Nissanka and Charith Asalanka have a complete of solely three fifties between them because the final T20 World Cup. They are additionally the one two batters who’ve performed all 11 matches succeeding the match final yr in a batting order that has been extremely inconsistent.

    The staff, present process a transition part, want to dig a few of them good vibes from the final T20I they performed, of their homeland, in opposition to Australia. When Dasun Shanaka blasted his facet to a win, chasing 75 within the last 5 overs.

    Not the favorites however…  

    Both Sri Lanka and Afghanistan begin the Asia Cup not as favorites to characteristic within the last due two Sundays from now.

    But among the many many issues forward of the opener, 30-year-old Dasun Shanaka additionally mentioned, “…in T20 cricket, there are no favorites. If we play good cricket, we can be the favorites.”

    An announcement of proven fact that bodes effectively for each the groups taking part in on Saturday. Away from the crises of their motherlands, going through much less regarding cricket crises of their very own. A win would barely change issues for his or her loudest followers however cricket continues. For higher or worse.

  • In Afghanistan, drought poses migration dilemma for villagers

    Having misplaced his job as a police coach after the Taliban takeover final August, Hussain Ali moved again to his village in Afghanistan’s central highlands with the intention of farming as soon as extra to offer for his household.

    Yet Ali’s despair deepened when he returned dwelling to discover a village hit so badly by drought that not solely his relations however your entire neighborhood had been considering migrating elsewhere.

    During the 5 years that the 37-year-old had been away, a effectively and a stream had dried up, ruining harvests and, in the end, the father-of-three’s hopes of rising crops once more.

    “For the past year, I’ve been watching our trees here slowly die,” Ali stated, standing subsequent to the world’s final remaining water supply, a pure stream close to the village of 40 properties.

    He requested to withhold the identify of the village in Bamyan province for concern of retribution from the Taliban.

    “We used to be able to harvest at least twice annually, but this year, we’re going to harvest early,” Ali added.

    “There’s not enough water for the crops to fully grow.”

    And the plight of Ali’s neighborhood is way from distinctive throughout the nation. Afghanistan is without doubt one of the world’s most weak nations to local weather change, and among the many least outfitted to cope with it, in line with the United Nations and support companies.

    This is exacerbating a catastrophic humanitarian disaster as Western nations have frozen billions of foreign-stored Afghan financial institution reserves, and suspended growth support which beforehand made up about 75% of the nation’s public spending.

    No water, no dwelling

    The earlier U.S.-backed authorities labored with the United Nations in mobilising assets to foster local weather change resilience, monitoring rainfall, for instance, or offering support to farmers.

    Supplying direct authorities funding had been easy, however has since change into not possible because of the sanctions imposed final yr on the Taliban.

    While the Taliban has offered emergency help for current disasters together with floods and is coordinating with NGOs, the group has little money on account of frozen Afghan belongings – which the United States this week introduced wouldn’t be launched “in the near-term” – in addition to the sanctions.

    An up to date plan, labored on by the previous authorities and the United Nations, presenting Afghanistan’s local weather actions by 2030 and detailed subsequent steps has been left unfinished because of the Taliban takeover, the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) stated.

    The U.N. company final October launched a disaster response initiative to help native communities in numerous methods, reminiscent of bettering pure catastrophe mitigation and resilience.

    It prioritises community-level interventions and work with native NGOs, with a “robust” vetting and danger administration system that “fully insulates the flow of any funding to the de facto authority”, stated UNDP communication specialist Won-Na Cha.

    Yet as droughts and erratic climate intensify, a rising variety of individuals are vulnerable to dropping their livelihoods and incomes, and should find yourself compelled emigrate regardless of the nationwide instability, U.N. and local weather change consultants have warned.

    In his function as a police coach in Kandahar province, Ali earned 18,000 afghani ($199) month-to-month, most of which he despatched to his household. Now, like many different former breadwinners who’ve returned to the village since August, he fears for the longer term.

    “This is our home, but if the water disappears, we’ll have to go too,” Ali advised the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

    “I lost my job and now I might lose my village.”

    Triple menace

    Conflict, extreme drought and financial disaster have left 24.4 million individuals – greater than 60% of Afghanistan’s inhabitants – in want of humanitarian support, the United Nations says. “Recurrent drought and erratic climatic shocks are resulting in a below-average harvest – further threatening incomes and livelihoods,” Ramiz Alakbarov, performing head of the U.N. Mission in Afghanistan, stated in emailed feedback.

    Last yr, a drastic discount in rainfall brought about water and meals shortage throughout 25 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces, he added.

    Bamyan, the place Ali lives, is a kind of 25 provinces – and local weather change-linked droughts have been on the rise.

    In Khoja Bidak, one other village in Banyam, located on a hilltop overlooking the Hindu Kush’s snow-topped peaks, water reserves – principally from snowmelt – have additionally declined.

    “We already wash our clothes and our carpets less because there just isn’t enough water,” stated Zakia Musa, a 50-year-old mom of 4.

    “Our lives depend on water. So if we can’t find any, we’ll pack our clothes, carry them in a bundle on our heads, and migrate elsewhere,” she added, stressing that it may very well be a matter of months till they’re compelled to maneuver.

    Stay or go?

    Her husband, Ali Musa, stands up on a close-by hilltop with a number of village elders, gazing over barren fields that stretch into the horizon with mud-brown homes dotting the panorama.

    “This year, the usual rains didn’t come, so the wheat we planted died,” the 50-year-old stated.

    The neighborhood had requested for assist from the previous authorities, which constructed a water basin to gather snowmelt, he stated. But it stood empty after a very poor two years for the village.

    Musa stated he had bought many of the goats he beforehand owned and that the financial downturn had left him nearly empty-handed – and with little to eat other than bread and potatoes.

    People have been spending as much as 90% of their revenue on meals since January, in line with the United Nations – whereas salaries have been shrinking and costs rising.

    “Poor governance by the Taliban will make things worse”, stated Erin Sikorsky, director at The Center for Climate and Security, a U.S.-based think-tank.

    “It is likely Afghanistan will see more internally displaced people going forward, as disruptions to substance agriculture intersect with other security risks.”

    While the conflict has been declared over, threats – together with from the Islamic State Khorasan (IS-Okay) – stay, and Hazara communities – the Shia minority ethnic group Ali Musa and Hussain Ali each belong to – have particularly been focused.

    The risk of migrating poses a dilemma for Ali Musa.

    “This is not a good place,” he stated, gazing over the panorama. “But it’s home, it’s our land. We can’t afford to go elsewhere, but we can’t survive here without water either.”

  • Taliban: Asked India to finish its growth tasks in Afghanistan

    THE TALIBAN regime in Afghanistan has requested India to finish the event tasks it had began in that nation, Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi stated on Sunday.

    “We are hopeful that with the upgrading of the diplomatic mission, we will move forward from the humanitarian aspect to development aspects. And in that area, our priority that we’ve also conveyed to the Indian side is that of the completion of some of the incomplete projects that India has done, as a first step,” Balkhi stated in an interview with The Indian Express — a day earlier than the primary anniversary of the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.

    August 15 has been declared a vacation however celebrations by the Taliban regime will probably be low-key, restricted to an official media occasion. The essential occasions might happen on September 1, the day the final international troops left Afghanistan final yr.

    Balkhi named the Shahtoot Dam in Kabul as one of many tasks that the Taliban wished India to finish. “India has a lot of different projects, and they are incomplete. And we have urged them to complete those because if they are not completed, all of it will go to waste,” he stated.

    India not too long ago reopened its embassy in Kabul, a yr after it was shut down and all personnel evacuated within the wake of the August 15, 2021 Taliban takeover of Afghanistan. The mission is manned by a director-rank IFS officer, who’s the officiating deputy chief of mission, and 4 different officers. A contingent of ITBP has additionally been flown over for the safety of the embassy.

    On Saturday, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had stated in Bengaluru that India’s determination to restart the mission was to assist the Afghan individuals by offering humanitarian and medical help and that India wished to assist in the realm of vaccine growth.

    India’s growth help to Afghanistan is estimated to be value nicely over $3 billion throughout 20 years, together with key roads, dams, electrical energy transmission traces and substations, and colleges and hospitals.

    Although Delhi has not made any statements but about growing its diplomatic presence in Kabul, Balkhi issued a press release on Saturday, saying the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA), the formal identify for the Taliban regime, “welcomes India’s step to upgrade its diplomatic representation in Kabul”. He stated the regime would guarantee safety and supply “all cooperation”.

    He reiterated on Sunday that “security assurances, diplomatic immunities and all the other necessary steps” had been given to India to improve the embassy.

    “We are moving in a very positive direction [with India]. They have reopened the embassy, they have sent their diplomats, they are looking at upgrading the level of representation here in the embassy, we have reopened flights between India and Afghanistan. We are working on letting Indian flights also come to us and currently there is Kam Air that has flights with India,” he stated.

    Balkhi stated commerce with India has “doubled”, and “we’re hopeful that moving forward through dialogue and engagement, we will address the remaining problems and concerns and reach a better stage”.

    The IEA additionally desires India to work on connectivity tasks, Balkhi stated, “because we need to connect Central Asia to South Asia. Afghanistan is the closest and most efficient route when it comes to the area of connectivity”.

    He stated with the intention to revive connectivity by means of Iran’s Chabahar port, the Taliban regime is “trying to revive the trilateral mechanism. We have sent our proposal and our messages to the Indian and Iranian sites. And they are open to reviving the Chabahar route”. The Taliban regime can also be eager to revive the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) pipeline venture.

    In response to a query on Pakistan’s denial of entry over the land path to Afghanistan, he stated this was “a matter between India and Pakistan… From our side, we are open to all countries to realise the full potential of Afghanistan when it comes to investments, minerals, trade, transit and connectivity”.

    Balkhi, who lived overseas for a number of years and speaks English fluently, stated the IEA “do not take as fact the claims of the United States” on the presence of the Al Qaeda chief Ayman Al Zawahiri or his killing in Kabul two weeks in the past. He stated the official investigation introduced by the regime was nonetheless ongoing.

    Reminded a few UN report flagging the presence of Al Qaeda and different terrorist teams together with people who had been a direct concern to India, comparable to Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Toiba, Balkhi stated the UN had a “track record” of “untrue reports” on Afghanistan. He pointed to a report within the New York Times a few new evaluation by US intelligence businesses that Al Qaeda has not regrouped in Afghanistan and doesn’t immediately have the flexibility to hold out assaults.

    “But the important thing is that the government of Afghanistan has a policy, which is that no individual or group will be allowed to use the territory of Afghanistan to threaten the security of others,” he stated.

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    Asked if the Taliban had a proper place on the Kashmir challenge, the spokesman stated: “The policy of the new government of Afghanistan is that we do not interfere in the internal matters of other nations. And we do not allow others to interfere in the internal matters of Afghanistan.”

    Asked if it was the Taliban’s place that Kashmir was India’s inside challenge, he stated: “We consider it an internal issue of Kashmir and all the other relevant sides.”

    He stated the “best way” that Indian issues in regards to the Taliban might be addressed was “through engagement and through dialogue and interaction”.

  • In Kabul, Afghan college students look ahead to passage to India: Don’t shut us out

    Sahar Noor Mohammadi, who received an ICCR scholarship to review a course at Chandigarh’s University Institute of Applied Management Studies, ought to have written her fourth semester examination in June this 12 months. The course had begun on-line in 2020 amidst the Covid-19 pandemic. This 12 months, courses shifted again to the classroom, and college students had been advised to seem bodily for the examination.

    But locked out of India with no visa, Sahar couldn’t write the examination. Other than an automatic reply, she has heard nothing extra about her e-visa utility, although she is aware of of 1 individual whose utility was accepted. With no solution to full her course and get her diploma, Sahar says she has misplaced hope that the longer term she had deliberate, of organising a small enterprise with an Indian buddy, has collapsed.

    With the Taliban banning all increased training from Class 7 onward, she has no training choices left in Afghanistan. “My younger sister’s education has also stopped. She was in Class 8,” mentioned Sahar, as she confirmed all of the determined messages she despatched to her trainer in Chandigarh.

    “She just stopped answering. See the number of folded hands (emoji) I have added to every message,” Sahar mentioned.

    Over 2,500 Afghans, who had been college students in India till final 12 months, are in the identical boat as Sahar. Many had returned residence to Afghanistan for the summer time break. Some had been hoping to acquire visas for the admissions that they had secured in schools throughout the nation.

    Now they’re watching unfinished programs, admissions that can not be taken up, and in some circumstances, separation from households left behind in India, after Delhi cancelled all current visas to Afghan nationals, unofficially citing safety grounds within the wake of the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan. It has issued barely 200 visas out of the 1000’s of functions for emergency e-visas it has acquired since then.

    Onib Dadgar, a topper of his Bachelor of Computer Applications course at Jamia Millia Islamia and gold medallist within the MCA course at JNU, has secured admission for a PhD course in Mysore University. He can not think about that India, which he referred to as his “second home” when he was invited to talk on the Ministry of External Affairs in 2019, has not accredited his visa utility.

    His PhD utility for analysis on large knowledge required two revealed papers. He returned to Kabul to work on them. On August 15, his current visa to review in India was cancelled when Delhi invalidated all visas issued to Afghans, citing a safety scare as a result of Taliban takeover.

    “Why involve students with valid visas in this security issue? Students pose no security risk to India. When we were in India for so many years, no one said we were a security threat then,” Dadgar mentioned. “You only know your true friends in times of difficulties,” he mentioned.

    Onib has spent the final 12 months interesting to Indian officialdom by varied channels – by Indian media, former President Hamid Karzai, former Vice-President Abdullah Abdullah, the Afghan Ambassador in Delhi, on social media – all to no avail but.

    Those who’ve utilized for visas can not assist noticing that India has evacuated Hindus and Sikhs in a number of batches. But even considering aloud the chance that their faith might need gone towards them is tough for a lot of.

    “We have grown up loving India, its movies, its culture. For us, it is the safest place, because of our historical links, natural affinity, the language, everything. Victimising students for the security issue is not on,” mentioned Haroon Wali, a analysis scholar on the English and Foreign Languages University in Hyderabad.

    Wali now faces dismissal from his job as an Assistant Professor at an Afghan instructional institute which funded his research at EFLU, and the demand to return the whole funding, as he has not been in a position to fulfill the principle requirement for the financing — that students submit common progress stories or a level.

    “How can I do that when I am here? I have no progress to report. I am broke, I am in a financial crisis, and I am in every other kind of crisis,” he mentioned.

    For at the very least two generations of Afghans who didn’t, in contrast to lots of their compatriots, have the means to fly out to Western international locations because the nation went from one large struggle within the Nineteen Eighties to a different from 2001, the chance to review in India, and ICCR’s scholarship scheme, had been actually life savers.

    Pointing out that 16,000 college students have been “supported” by India since 2001, Wali mentioned it was as a result of India knew these college students could be its finest ambassadors in Afghanistan. “This is what Pakistan wants to achieve but cannot. It is unthinkable that India has left us in the lurch,” he mentioned.

    Every nation together with China, Pakistan, Turkey and Russia that had Afghan college students caught in Afghanistan in the course of the Taliban takeover both evacuated them instantly or organized for his or her visas, Dadgar mentioned, “but not India”.

    Some senior students unable to return to India have households there. They had left them behind, believing their very own return to India was imminent. Gulab Mir Rahmany’s spouse and three youngsters are in Kerala. His spouse is pursuing a PhD in Physics in Kerala University. Rahmany can also be a doctoral scholar in the identical college.

    After failing to get any response to his e-visa utility, he went to Iran in February to strive his luck from there. He has now maxed his Iranian go to extensions and is determined.

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    “I have been away from my wife and children for more than one year. Imagine the depression my wife and I are undergoing. She has to do her course work, she is in the lab, and she has to look after the kids,” he mentioned. “My request is that the Government of India should assess its position neutrally, see the record of the students. Every student has a track record. I have my supervisor who knows me, knows my work.”

    Habibullah Rashad is one other separated husband and father or mother. He accomplished his Master’s in Environmental Sciences from Osmania University. He and his spouse returned to their residence in Mazar-e-Sharif in May 2021 in the course of the Delta wave of the pandemic. But his spouse bought a name from Osmania University, the place she had been accepted as a PhD scholar on a ICCR fellowship, asking her to return and full the method.

    “I sent my wife and our two-year-old twins back to Hyderabad, thinking I would follow them in a few weeks. But everything changed and my visa was cancelled,” Rashad mentioned. “They cannot come here because of the situation here, and I cannot join them. We have been separated cruelly.”

  • In Babur’s backyard too, Taliban draw a line — males & ladies, even when household, can’t mingle

    At the 500-year-old Bagh-e-Babur, the grand backyard designed by the founding father of the Mughal dynasty and likewise the positioning of his last resting place, there’s a flutter on the ticket counter. A person shopping for a ticket has simply learnt that women and men should enter the backyard by way of separate gates.

    After some questions and telling the ticket vendor that it’s a “rubbish rule”, the household separates – ladies to the precise, males to the left. They can’t reunite contained in the backyard both. The 11 hectare-terraced backyard has been partitioned with inexperienced baize and ropes into separate sections for women and men after a Taliban decree from the Ministry of Vice and Virtue.

    The rule took impact inside three months of the Taliban takeover in August final yr, stated an official on the backyard, a UNESCO protected World Heritage Site. Since the park was restored within the first decade of this century, yearly, tons of of hundreds of individuals have visited the sixteenth century backyard the place Babur lies buried.

    For Kabul residents, the backyard, with its chinar and walnut timber and flower beds, is among the few open areas within the metropolis, a inexperienced oasis that has offered a way of peace and solace by way of the violence, turmoil and uncertainty that has always battered their nation.

    But even months after the rule was carried out, many members of the general public appear nonetheless unaware of the restriction, and are shocked once they find out about it as they arrive.

    This Friday too, as households arrived with picnic baskets, teams of girls with young children in tow streamed into the ladies’s part.

    The sudden sight of so many ladies collectively comes as a pointy realisation of their close to complete absence from the streets of Kabul, with restrictions decreed and enforced by the Vice and Virtue Ministry now stopping them from working, finding out or collaborating in nationwide life in any significant manner apart from as home-makers.

    Here within the park, the ladies unfold out sheets to take a seat on the garden. With no concern of the Taliban policing them on this area, some had even let their hijab slip. They took selfies, snacked out of small picnic plates and chattered, as youngsters performed round them.

    Babur’s grave and the Shahjahan-built mosque subsequent to it are on the lads’s facet. Husbands and fathers separated from their households lounged on the lawns or below the chinar timber. Young youngsters ferried trays of meals to them from the ladies’s facet.

    Dozens of Taliban too roamed the lads’s facet of the backyard on the general public vacation earlier than the primary anniversary of their victory, having fun with the views of Kabul from the backyard’s prime terraces, with the extra senior ones sitting round in absorbed in discussions its terraces, however not earlier than depositing their weapons on the gate.

    Park officers stated the variety of guests to the park had dropped dramatically during the last one yr. The Friday rush, he stated, was not as a lot because it was earlier than the regime change, he stated.

    “Some people get angry, and they even go away when they learn about the separate entrances. They come to spend time together, not separately,” stated one official, including that it had hit revenues, and led to a sequence of cost-cutting measures together with reducing down on the employees. It was all affecting the upkeep of the backyard, one official confided.

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    The excessive visibility of the Taliban within the park, particularly on Fridays, was additionally affecting the footfall, the official stated. However, they don’t seem to be allowed to hold their weapons contained in the park. The official stated each Taliban getting into the park has to deposit his arms on the gate.

    Bagh-e-Babur was all however destroyed within the civil struggle that broke out between varied teams of mujahideen within the Nineties.

    In 2001, after US forces drove out the Taliban from Kabul, the Aga Khan Trust took up the restoration of the backyard, together with the planting of timber. Mohammed Shaheer, the late Indian panorama designer who was a advisor within the restoration for Humayun’s Tomb and Sundar Nursery backyard in Delhi, performed a principal position within the restoration of the Bagh-e-Babur.

  • Starving children pack hospital wards: Capturing Afghanistan’s starvation disaster | In Pics

    Hospital wards filled with malnourished kids, mother and father crying for assist, rising hospitalisations and a deepening financial disaster – Afghanistan is in a race towards time to save lots of the youngest casualties of the nation’s starvation disaster with little hope for assist.

    Every few seconds, a sick youngster is reportedly introduced into the emergency room of the primary hospital in Lashkar Gah as individuals in Afghanistan starve amid an acute meals scarcity within the nation.

    WHY IS AFGHANISTAN STARVING?

    Afghanistan has been reeling from a humanitarian disaster with its individuals ravenous as a consequence of a big meals scarcity within the nation. The aid-dependent nation has been going to the canine ever for the reason that Taliban seized energy in August final 12 months, which led to worldwide sanctions and an enormous financial disaster. The nation’s financial system collapsed as worldwide sanctions lower off billions in funds for the federal government and lots of growth businesses pulled out. To make it worse, the nation is dealing with one in all its worst droughts in a long time.

    Millions of persons are ravenous in Afghanistan because the nation is dealing with a starvation emergency amid lethal drought and years of battle. A staggering 95 per cent of Afghans should not getting sufficient to eat, with that quantity rising to virtually 100 per cent in female-headed households, a United Nations report stated.

    “Afghanistan’s humanitarian crisis is in essence an economic crisis,” stated John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. “Afghans see food in the market but lack the cash to buy it. Health workers are ready to save lives but have no salaries or supplies. Billions have been pledged for aid but remain unspent because banks can’t transfer or access funds.”

    KIDS BEARING BRUNT

    The United Nations has warned that just about 23 million persons are dealing with excessive ranges of starvation with kids bearing the brunt of the disaster. 14 million children are susceptible to hunger and over 1.1 million kids beneath the age of 5 will seemingly face essentially the most extreme type of malnutrition this 12 months, in accordance with the UN.

    WATCH: Afghanistan Under Taliban Rule: What Ails Afghanistan Today? | India Today’s Ground Report

    An rising variety of hungry, losing kids are dropped at hospital wards every day as poverty is spiralling and pushing extra Afghans in want of assist. To make it worse, world meals costs are mounting from the battle in Ukraine, and guarantees of worldwide funding to date should not coming by way of, in accordance with an evaluation report issued this month. But they’re struggling to maintain tempo with relentlessly worsening circumstances. As a outcome, the susceptible are falling sufferer, together with kids but additionally moms struggling to feed themselves together with their households.

    Afghan kids are ravenous to demise almost every single day, in accordance with humanitarian organizations. Heartwrenching pictures from Afghanistan hospitals present mother and father holding their malnourished infants whereas wards are already filled with sick kids.

    The numbers of youngsters beneath 5 being admitted into well being amenities with extreme acute malnutrition have steadily mounted, from 16,000 in March 2020 to 18,000 in March 2021, then leaping to twenty-eight,000 in March 2022, the UNICEF consultant in Afghanistan, Mohamed Ag Ayoya, wrote in a tweet final week.

    Nazia 30, who has misplaced 4 kids as a consequence of extreme malnutrition, holds her malnourished child in a hospital in Parwan province north of Kabul, Afghanistan.

    An acute malnourished boy lies on a mattress on the malnutrition ward of the Indira Gandhi hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    A physician examines a malnourished youngster within the Indira Gandhi hospital in Kabul.

    A malnourished lady being handled on the Indira Gandhi hospital in Kabul.

    A girl holds her malnourished child on the Ataturk Children’s Hospital in Kabul,

    An acute malnourished boy lies on the Indira Gandhi hospital in Kabul.

    A physician measures a malnourished child at f the Indira Gandhi hospital in Kabul.

    An Afghan household eats lunch of their residence in one in all Kabul’s poor neighborhoods in Kabul