UNAMA urges lifting curbs on girls’ education as Afghanistan marks ICT Day

Khaama Press

United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan has called on the Taliban to lift restrictions on Afghan girls, marking the International Girls in ICT Day with renewed concern over access to education.

UNAMA said more than four years have passed and an entire generation of Afghan girls remains excluded from formal schooling, limiting their future opportunities.

The mission stressed that education, particularly in information and communication technology, is critical for employment, innovation and long-term stability in Afghanistan.

The International Girls in ICT Day, observed annually on April 23, promotes equal access to digital skills, yet Afghan girls have been denied schooling for over 1,600 days.

Humanitarian agencies warn that restrictions on female education risk deepening poverty, weakening economic prospects and widening gender inequality across the country.

UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said returning Afghan women and girls face major barriers in accessing education and essential services due to ongoing restrictions.

Aid groups say the continued bans have disrupted not only education but also healthcare access and livelihoods, increasing vulnerability among women-led households.

The Taliban have maintained limits on girls’ education since regaining power, despite sustained international pressure to reopen schools and expand access for women and girls.

UNAMA urges lifting curbs on girls’ education as Afghanistan marks ICT Day
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Pakistan strikes damage homes in eastern Afghanistan as border tensions persist

Khaama Press

Local sources in Kunar Province say fresh Pakistani strikes have damaged several homes in the Sarkano district, as cross-border hostilities continue to escalate.

Residents reported that the attacks began around midnight and continued into Wednesday morning, with explosions heard across multiple regions of the district.

Sources added that Pakistani forces also targeted areas in Asadabad, though no casualties were immediately reported there. Video footage shared with local media shows at least one residential house heavily damaged.

Officials from the Taliban administration in Kunar have not yet commented on the latest strikes, and independent verification of the extent of damage remains limited.

Tensions between Taliban and Pakistan have intensified over the past two months, with repeated exchanges of fire reported along the disputed border areas.

Islamabad has accused militant groups operating from Afghanistan territory of launching attacks inside Pakistan, while Taliban authorities deny providing safe havens and blame Pakistani forces for violating Afghanistan sovereignty.

Over recent weeks, Kunar has emerged as a key flashpoint, with multiple reports of artillery shelling and airstrikes targeting border districts, forcing families to flee their homes.

Residents in affected regions say repeated attacks have disrupted daily life, damaged infrastructure, and heightened fears of a broader humanitarian crisis if clashes continue.

Pakistan strikes damage homes in eastern Afghanistan as border tensions persist
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Afghans Who Helped U.S. Forces Say They’re Being Pushed Back to the Taliban

By Elian Peltier

The New York Times

April 23, 2026

Once promised a move to the United States, Afghan refugees who helped U.S. forces say they face ‘bad or worse’ options: resettlement to Congo or returning home to live under the Taliban.

Afghan refugees who once helped U.S. forces and have been stranded for years at a former U.S. military base in Qatar, say they are being forced to choose between returning to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan or resettling in a third country that some have never heard of.

The New York Times reported this week that the Trump administration has been in talks with the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo to send as many as 1,100 Afghans to the Central African country.

Camp officials deny that any decision has been made, even as they have, for months, pushed Afghans to return to Afghanistan by offering free airfare and a stipend, according to camp residents and screenshots of messages from camp officials seen by The Times.

Officials at the facility, Camp As Sayliyah in Qatar, told residents on Wednesday that no deal had been finalized.

“Please be aware NO third country has been confirmed or officially announced for resettlement,” read a message sent to a WhatsApp group that officials have used to communicate with residents. “The U.S. government continues discussions to identify and secure voluntary resettlement opportunities.”

For months, the Afghans had lived under a cloud, hearing from camp officials and aid workers that they might be relocated to either an African or Asian country.

“Now we are stuck between bad and worse options,” said Arash Pahlavi, a camp resident.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban government spokesman, said Afghan authorities would welcome the return of camp residents.

“Now they have realized how much importance the Americans give them, and how much value they place on those who worked with them,” Mr. Mujahid said.

He did not respond to questions about reports of human rights abuses — including extrajudicial killings, imprisonment, and torture — against members of the former Afghan administration and allies of U.S. forces.

If implemented, the relocation to Congo would be the latest measure taken by the Trump administration to prevent Afghan refugees who helped U.S. forces in Afghanistan from reaching the United States. In November, the Trump administration froze a special visa program for Afghans, and in January, said it would close the camp in March.

Mr. Pahlavi has family in the United States, but his plans to join them fell apart when President Trump suspended a refugee admission program last year.

Since U.S. officials running the camp began offering free plane tickets and stipends late last year, over 200 people have gone back, according to Shawn VanDiver, the president of the aid group AfghanEvac, who was briefed on the State Department’s plan to relocate camp residents to Congo. Six residents confirmed that dozens of families have left.

Those still at the camp include former interpreters for the U.S. military, Afghan special operations forces, and relatives of American service members, many of whom would be at risk of human rights abuses if repatriated.

The U.S. plan adds to a growing list of coercive measures implemented by countries across the world to send Afghan refugees back home. Iran and Pakistan forced nearly three million Afghans back home last year. The European Union is in talks with the Taliban government to repatriate undocumented Afghans. A notable exception has been Brazil, which has received hundreds of Afghan refugees since last year.

It is unclear whether the deal with the Congolese government would include some or all of the 1,100 residents. More than half of them are women and children.

Aid workers and U.S. politicians opposing the plan say relocation to Congo would be anything but secure and voluntary. Congo is in the grip of one of the world’s most severe displacement crises and is in conflict with its neighbor, Rwanda.

“The option to be deported to the Taliban or to move to a catastrophic humanitarian crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo is not a choice,” said Representative Sydney Kamlager-Dove, Democrat of California, who is a member of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee that oversees Afghanistan issues.

The State Department and the Congolese government did not respond to a request for comment.

Residents of As Sayliyah went through at least one round of preliminary vetting, according to Jon Finer, a former deputy national security adviser under the Biden administration. Some have had English and driving lessons and taken courses on American culture, residents said.

However, not all had been cleared for U.S. relocation before Mr. Trump suspended the program.

Some residents said they would be ready to go back to Afghanistan if Congo were the only other option, or would accept resettlement to Congo.

“I will choose Congo over Afghanistan because I don’t feel safe there in Afghanistan,” said Salem, a former Afghan Air Force pilot.

But Zahra, 15, would be unable to go to school or travel long distances without a male companion, under restrictions imposed on women and girls by the Taliban government.

She and Salem spoke on condition that only their first names be used to avoid retaliation if they were sent back to Afghanistan.

“Afghanistan is my homeland — I respect it,” Zahra said. “But I’m not ready to go back.”

Safiullah Padshah and Yaqoob Akbary contributed reporting.

Afghans Who Helped U.S. Forces Say They’re Being Pushed Back to the Taliban
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EU Special Envoy Travels to Kabul, Afghanistan

EU envoy visits Kabul for talks with Taliban officials, focusing on aid, diplomacy, and cooperation as Afghanistan faces a dire humanitarian crisis.

The European Union’s special envoy for Afghanistan, Gilles Bertrand, visited Kabul on Wednesday and held talks with Taliban officials, the Taliban foreign ministry said.

During the meeting with Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammad Naeem, both sides discussed political, economic and trade ties, as well as prospects for expanding cooperation through dialogue and diplomacy.

Taliban officials welcomed EU humanitarian assistance but called for increased aid, urging a shift toward long-term development projects to address unemployment and economic hardship.

The EU envoy stressed continued engagement and described dialogue as the most practical path forward, while the EU has yet to issue an official statement on the visit.

Afghanistan is facing a dire humanitarian and economic crisis, with millions dependent on international aid amid widespread poverty, food insecurity, and limited access to basic services. The situation has worsened following political changes and reduced international funding.

The United Nations and aid agencies have repeatedly warned of a deepening human crisis, highlighting urgent needs in healthcare, food supply, and employment as winter shocks and economic stagnation persist.

Separately, EU sources confirmed that a Taliban technical delegation is expected to visit Brussels for talks, even as the bloc considers controversial plans to return rejected asylum seekers to Afghanistan despite human rights concerns.

The visit marks the envoy’s third trip to Kabul, underscoring ongoing but cautious engagement between the EU and Taliban authorities amid mounting humanitarian pressure.

EU Special Envoy Travels to Kabul, Afghanistan
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Trump Is Said to Be in Talks to Send Afghans Who Aided U.S. Forces to Congo

After halting a U.S. resettlement program for Afghans who helped the American war effort, President Trump is in talks to send as many as 1,100 of them to the Democratic Republic of Congo, an aid worker briefed on the plan said Tuesday.

The group includes interpreters for the U.S. military, former members of the Afghan Special Operations forces and family members of American service members. More than 400 children are among them.

The Afghans have been living in limbo in Qatar for over a year. They were taken there after being evacuated by the United States for their own safety because they supported American forces during the war against the Taliban that began in 2001.

Shawn VanDiver, the president of the aid group AfghanEvac, said he had been briefed on the Congo plan by State Department officials. He said that the Afghans would be given a choice between returning to live under the Taliban or being sent to Congo, which is suffering one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

More than 600,000 refugees, mostly from the Central African Republic and Rwanda, are currently in Congo, according to the United Nations. Human rights activists say that the country is not equipped to take in more in the midst of fighting with neighboring Rwanda that has displaced even more people because of attacks on refugee camps.

“We think this is just them wanting to send these people back to Afghanistan, where they know they will face certain death,” said Mr. VanDiver. “They know that Afghans are not going to accept the D.R.C. Why would you go from the world’s No. 1 refugee crisis to the world’s No. 2 refugee crisis?”

The discussions highlight the longstanding tension between America’s obligation to Afghans who face grave danger in retaliation for helping U.S. forces during the war, and the Trump administration’s pledge to curtail immigration.

Much is unknown about the plans taking shape, including whether all the Afghans would go to Congo or whether deals were coming together in other countries. Negotiations like this have stalled before.

A Congolese government spokesman did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Tommy Pigott, a State Department spokesman, accused the Biden administration of moving hastily in bringing Afghan allies to the United States. He said the Trump administration was working to find options for the remaining Afghans.

“The American people have had to pay the price for the irresponsible way hundreds of thousands of Afghans were brought into the United States,” he said. “Our focus now is on restoring accountability by advancing responsible, voluntary resettlement options.”

American diplomats have been asking countries in Africa to take in the Afghans for months. But talks fell apart in many places, according to Mr. VanDiver and diplomats with knowledge of the discussions.

More than 190,000 Afghans who aided the U.S. effort resettled in the U.S. between August 2021 and mid-2025, after passing background checks.

But a group of more than 1,100 Afghans are being housed in a former U.S. military base in Qatar known as Camp As Sayliyah. The American government brought them there in late 2024 and promised them a path to settlement in the United States if they passed further checks.

“They had the expectation that within weeks they’d be relocated to the U.S.,” said Rina Amiri, a former senior diplomat working on Afghan human rights issues. “Who is going to fight alongside the U.S. when the U.S. betrays the people who stood alongside us?”

The Congo negotiations follow behind-the-scenes pressure from the Qatari government to find the remaining Afghan refugees a new home.

Some of the people left at the camp have been fully vetted; others have not, Mr. VanDiver said. But Mr. Trump’s immigration policies have made it impossible for any of them to come to the United States now. In November, the government froze the special visa program after a National Guard member was shot in Washington last year by an Afghan man allowed into the United States after the Taliban took power again. In January, the administration said it would close the transit camp without saying what would happen to the people there.

Many of the Afghans in Doha have told officials that they would not voluntarily agree to being sent to Congo, according to a person familiar with the planning, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe confidential discussions. Some Afghans questioned whether they would be protected there. Others asked why they would go to Congo when their loved ones are in the United States.

Andrew Sullivan, a military veteran and the executive director of No One Left Behind, a nonprofit group that has been working to resettle Afghans to America, said some had been deemed ineligible for reasons that have nothing to do with national security. For example, one woman turned 21 and is no longer eligible to be included on her father’s visa, he said.

But, he said, the administration has other options available to bring them to the United States, including the ability to issue exemptions to the policy.

“Our belief is that if, if they can pass security vetting, they should be coming to the United States,” Mr. Sullivan said. “If they can’t, and they’re not going to come to the United States, I do believe the U.S. government has an obligation to ensure that they’re going to a third country where they’re going to be secure, they’re going to be supported, and there aren’t ongoing humanitarian rights issues.”

American diplomats have been meeting with Democratic Republic of Congo officials for months. Recently, the Trump administration struck an agreement with the country to accept migrants from other countries who face deportation from the United States. Part of that deal included a $50 million grant to the U.N. refugee agency to provide assistance in the country.

Discussions over the Afghans are separate from the deportation deal, but both are examples of what has become a hallmark of Mr. Trump’s immigration strategy: moving people to faraway places, even when those countries have human rights abuses or authoritarian governments.

Pranav Baskar in New York contributed reporting.

Trump Is Said to Be in Talks to Send Afghans Who Aided U.S. Forces to Congo
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Over 360 rights activists call for immediate release of jailed reporters in Afghanistan

 

More than 360 journalists, media workers and rights activists have voiced deep concern over the situation of detained reporters in Afghanistan, calling for their immediate and unconditional release in an open letter.

The signatories said responsibility for the health and safety of jailed journalists lies with the authorities in Kabul, warning that continued detention raises serious human rights concerns.

The letter, addressed to the United Nations, the European Union and international media watchdogs, names several detained journalists, including Shakeeb Ahmad Nazari, Bashir Hatef and Hamid Farhadi.

The signatories said their colleagues are enduring harsh prison conditions despite their work being limited to informing the public, stressing that detention for professional journalism is a violation of fundamental freedoms.

They added that imprisoning journalists for their reporting contradicts international human rights standards and undermines principles of free expression and access to information.

Press freedom in Afghanistan has sharply deteriorated in recent years, with increasing restrictions on media outlets, reporters and civil society groups.

International organisations have repeatedly warned that arbitrary arrests, censorship and restrictionsا on reporting have created a climate of fear among journalists.

The broader humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan has further complicated the situation, with economic collapse and reduced international funding affecting both media institutions and independent reporting.

Rights groups say shrinking civic space and pressure on media have limited the ability of journalists to operate freely, particularly on sensitive political and social issues.

The letter highlights concerns about the physical and mental health of detained journalists, particularly Nazari and Hatef, whose conditions are described as deteriorating.

Signatories warned that indifference to their situation would be unjustifiable, urging stronger international action to prevent further harm.

They called on organisations such as the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Without Borders to intensify diplomatic pressure and take concrete steps to secure the release of Afghan journalists.

They also urged local and international media outlets to amplify the issue, saying wider coverage could help mobilise support and protect those still in detention.

Analysts say sustained international pressure and visibility will be key to improving conditions, as concerns grow over the independent of press freedom in Afghanistan.

Over 360 rights activists call for immediate release of jailed reporters in Afghanistan
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Even the dead must make way as construction transforms Afghanistan’s capital

By ELENA BECATOROS

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The door that once led to a family room now faces nothing but the void. Most of the floor is gone, as are the walls and roof.

This used to be Syed Murtaza Sadar’s home in Kabul, on top of the barber shop and public bath that was his family’s business. Those, too, are nearly all gone, reduced to bricks and rubble. Sadar and his family were forced to tear down most of the building themselves.

“This was our house and now I am destroying it with my own hands,” the 25-year-old said, taking a brief break from pulling down a brick wall. “It will be very difficult for us.”

Two months ago, municipal authorities came to this street and told home and business owners their properties were being expropriated to make way for a wider road, part of efforts to modernize the Afghan capital’s heavily congested streets.

At first, nobody believed them, Sadar said. But then the demolition crews arrived.

The Taliban revive a plan to modernize the streets

Homes, businesses, even a graveyard are being razed across Kabul to make way for road construction. Widened roads, flyovers and underpasses are rapidly replacing narrow and often deeply pot-holed streets.

Much of the plan was drawn up years ago, when Afghanistan had a U.S.-backed government. But most work never got off the ground, mired in red tape, corruption, and security risks due to the Taliban insurgency.

Shortly after the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in 2021, in the wake of the chaotic withdrawal of U.S.-led troops, Kabul’s new municipal authorities set about reviving the projects.

In the past four and a half years, roughly 450 kilometers (280 miles) of roads have been built in the capital, Naimatullah Barakzai, Kabul municipality’s representative for cultural affairs, said during a recent news conference. During that time, 11,278 properties were expropriated.

Another 233 projects are planned for this year, with over 1.9 billion afghanis ($29 million) allocated, said Mohammad Qasim Afghan, the municipality’s head of planning.

The road construction projects are paid for entirely by municipal funds, Barakzai said, noting that over the past 4 1/2 years, Kabul municipality had raised more than 28 billion afghanis (about $434 million).

Property owners are given about three months’ notice and paid compensation at rates set by the municipality. In the past year, more than 1.2 billion afghanis ($18.6 million) were paid in compensation, Barakzai said.

Dissent isn’t really an option.

Sadar, the property owner, said demolition crews tore down the front part of buildings in his street. Then authorities told owners they must finish the job themselves.

His business employed about 25 people, Sadar said. It sustained his extended family — five families in all, each with three or four children.

“If the government gives us money (in compensation) then God willing, I will be able to go back to work and I will be able to buy a house or build a house for myself,” he said. For now, they are living in rented accommodation, eating into their savings.

And yet, Sadar said he is happy the road is expanding. The existing one, with a single lane in each direction, is so choked with vehicles that going anywhere means spending an hour sitting in traffic, he noted.

Construction offers much-needed jobs

At another construction site in the city, project manager and engineer Obaidullah Elham said crews work around the clock, seven days a week, to build a Turkish-designed 1.5 billion afghani ($23 million) flyover and underpass to replace the heavily congested Baraki intersection.

Five hundred workers, skilled and unskilled, are employed on the project, Elham said, providing much-needed jobs in a country with widespread poverty.

Work on the 470-meter (1,540-foot) long underpass began last July and it is 80% complete, the project manager said, as an excavator dug into the earth behind him. Construction on the flyover began earlier this year. It will be just the second in Kabul.

Even the dead must move

In Kabul’s Qala-e-Khater neighborhood, part of a graveyard that has held the bodies of residents for about 200 years also must make way for a new road that will slice through the community.

Graves lie empty, with large rectangular holes where the dead have been exhumed. Their remains have been moved across the street to another section of the graveyard.

Abdul Wadood Alokozay said his grandfather’s body was among them.

Alokozay’s extended family owned three properties in the area. One was a girls’ madrassa, or religious school. The other two were homes for his family. All were expropriated and razed to the ground. All that remains is a vague imprint in the muddy ground.

“At first our family (were) all sad for this, that we lost our house,” the 21-year-old said. Even harder was tearing it down themselves, after living there for more than two decades.

As compensation, they received more than $13,000 for all three buildings and have been promised more for the land. The family has built a new, three-story home on other land they owned, overlooking the former site.

Plans for this road have existed on paper for decades, said 30-year-old community representative Shah Faisal Alokozay, Abdul Wadood’s cousin.

“It’s a very important road, connecting east and north Kabul,” he said. “So it is very important for the community.”___

Associated Press writer Abdul Qahar Afghan contributed to this report.

Even the dead must make way as construction transforms Afghanistan’s capital
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Food prices in Afghanistan jump up to 47%, WFP warns

Khaama Press

Food prices in Afghanistan have risen by up to 47% over the past year, the World Food Programme (WFP) said, warning of growing pressure on households.

Staple items including rice, wheat, sugar and cooking oil recorded significant annual increases, while weekly price changes remained relatively stable. Markets are still functioning but face rising transport costs and supply disruptions.

WFP said trade routes have shifted toward western and northern corridors, with heavy reliance on the Islam Qala crossing with Iran, increasing risks of delays and higher costs.

At the same time, weak labour markets are worsening the crisis, with average work availability dropping to less than two days per week, sharply reducing purchasing power.

Afghanistan is facing one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with around 22 million people in need of assistance, according to UN estimates.

Recent international funding cuts have forced aid agencies, including WFP, to scale back food assistance programmes, leaving millions at risk of acute hunger.

The situation has been further strained by a growing influx of Afghan returnees from Pakistan and Iran, increasing demand for already limited food and basic services.

WFP warned that rising prices, reduced aid and limited jobs are compounding hardship, pushing more Afghan families deeper into food insecurity.

Food prices in Afghanistan jump up to 47%, WFP warns
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Amnesty urges UK to lift asylum restrictions on Afghan women

Amnesty International and the Gender Action for Peace and Security (GAPS) have urged the United Kingdom to halt asylum policies they say are increasingly rejecting Afghan women and girls seeking protection.

In a joint report released on April 16, the groups said acceptance rates for Afghan asylum seekers in the UK have fallen sharply from 96% to 34%, leaving hundreds of women denied refuge in 2025 alone.

They warned that the decline comes despite Afghan women fleeing one of the world’s harshest systems of gender repression in Afghanistan, where restrictions severely limit education, employment, and freedom of movement.

The report said UK policies aimed at tightening immigration control are effectively restricting access to protection for those most in need, particularly vulnerable women and girls.

It added that many Afghan women face what it described as “systematic exclusion,” with shrinking international support compounding their already precarious conditions.

Since the return of the Taliban in 2021, women in Afghanistan have faced sweeping curbs on basic rights, prompting widespread concern from global human rights organizations.

The UK, a signatory to international human rights frameworks, has pledged to support women and girls under the United Nations agenda on women, peace, and security.

The groups called on the UK government to reverse restrictive asylum measures, expand safe pathways, and ensure Afghan women receive the protection aligned with international commitments.

Amnesty urges UK to lift asylum restrictions on Afghan women
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Pakistan police detain landlords renting homes to Afghans in Balochistan

 

Authorities in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan, have detained more than 20 landlords and shop owners for renting properties to undocumented Afghan migrants during a recent enforcement operation.

Local police said the crackdown, launched on Tuesday, targeted violations of rental laws, with cases registered against those detained under existing legal provisions governing housing and foreign residency.

The operation also led to the identification and detention of hundreds of undocumented Afghanistan migrants, reflecting a broader effort by Pakistan to tighten immigration controls.

Afghan migrants in Balochistan say the restrictions have made daily life increasingly difficult, limiting access to housing, employment, and essential services needed for basic survival.

Officials say such measures are part of a wider policy framework aimed at regulating undocumented foreigners and enforcing national laws on residency and property rentals.

Pakistan has previously banned renting properties to undocumented foreign nationals in Islamabad and surrounding areas, extending restrictions to utilities, mobile SIM cards, and other essential services.

In recent months, Afghan refugees have raised concerns in letters to the United Nations and other bodies, citing increased arrests, harassment, and forced deportations.

The latest crackdown underscores growing pressure on Afghan migrants in Pakistan, as authorities intensify enforcement measures while humanitarian concerns over their treatment continue to mount.

Pakistan police detain landlords renting homes to Afghans in Balochistan
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