Afghanistan’s capital is in the grip of a water crisis

Associated Press

April 14, 2026

Nestled in a high-altitude valley in Afghanistan’s Hindu Kush mountain range, Kabul is rapidly running out of water

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The woman was furious. Standing in the muddy lane sloping up the hill in one of the Afghan capital’s poorer neighborhoods, she pulled her headscarf aside to reveal thick grey-white hair.

“You see this hair? Even I with my white hair, I have to carry water,” said Marofa, 52, a resident of Kabul’s Deh Mazang neighborhood who, like many Afghans, goes by one name. “These containers are heavy. We have no strength left in our backs, no strength left in our legs.”

A mosque down the hill has its own well that provides free water, but it is undrinkable — yellow and brackish — and has to be carried. Potable water is trucked into the neighborhood on three-wheeled motorcycles and sold. For many, the price is too steep.

“We have no money for food. How can we get water?” said Wali Mohammad, 90, another local resident who didn’t hide his rage.

Both said that a few months after the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in 2021, the new authorities cut pipes some residents had laid to siphon water from a communal well to their homes.

“They cut off our water. They are powerful and they don’t even give us a reason why,” Mohammad said.

But another resident, 32-year-old Najibullah Rahimi, said the pipes to people’s homes made the well’s water level drop, leaving those living higher up the hill with no water at all. “So the government came and cut the pipes.”

Kabul’s dwindling water resources

Nestled in a high-altitude valley of the Hindu Kush mountains, Kabul is rapidly running out of water. Its population relies mostly on groundwater extracted from wells. But the groundwater has been receding at an alarming rate, and some wells have to be dug as deep as 150 meters (nearly 500 feet) to reach it.

An April 2025 report by the aid group Mercy Corps said the level of Kabul’s aquifers had plunged by 25-30 meters (about 80-100 feet) over the past decade. Aquifers hold massive amounts of water deep under land surfaces. Water in them collects slowly over years as precipitation seeps in. Too much extraction from aquifers, or changes to the climate bringing less water, leads to depletion.

“Without large-scale changes to Kabul’s water management dynamics, the city faces an unprecedented humanitarian disaster within the coming decade, and likely much sooner,” it said.

Climate change, mostly caused by the burning of gasoline, oil and coal, has played its part. Repeated droughts have reduced snowfall, whose gradual melting can replenish groundwater. Instead, Kabul sees more sudden, heavy rainfall that leads to flooding but not enough of it reaches the aquifer.

A long developing crisis

The changing climate has only compounded what has long been a growing crisis, said Najibullah Sadid, a Germany-based water resources and environment expert with the Afghanistan Water and Environment Professionals Network.

“Even without climate change Kabul would have seen this crisis, with the enormous, unprecedented increase in population and urbanization,” Sadid said.

The city has more than doubled in size over the past two decades. Kabul saw a major influx of Afghans returning from neighboring countries after the fall of the Taliban in 2001. It is seeing another now, since Pakistan and Iran began expelling Afghans in 2023. From a population of around 2.5 million in 2001, Kabul now holds an estimated 6 million people.

In some parts, shallow aquifers have already run dry, Sadid said. And recent rains have little effect as Kabul is now so built up there is little unpaved, natural ground where water can penetrate.

“Even if it is raining every day, it will not impact groundwater levels anymore, because there is no place to impact the groundwater,” Sadid explained.

Mismanagement of water resources has compounded the problem, he said, singling out beverage companies and greenhouses that use large amounts of groundwater.

Water management efforts

Authorities are acutely aware of the problem.

“The water situation in Kabul city is in a critical state,” said Ministry of Water and Energy spokesman Qari Matiullah Abid. “The main reasons are that the population has increased significantly, rainfall has decreased and consumption has increased.”

He said the government is taking action. It imposed restrictions on groundwater extraction by beverage companies, farmers and other commercial users. Water meters have been installed and quotas imposed on businesses such as car washes and large buildings, and those exceeding their limit are told to move out of Kabul.

To help replenish groundwater, check dams – small, temporary structures across waterways – have been constructed in Kabul’s 14 districts, and thousands of absorption wells that help manage stormwater have been dug, Abid said.

He also pointed to the completion of Kabul’s Shah wa Arous Dam, inaugurated in 2024 and designed to hold 10 million cubic meters (353 million cubic feet) of water, and the removal of millions of tons of sediment from the Qargha Dam, increasing the reservoir’s capacity.

But those are not enough.

Potential solutions are still out of reach

Two major projects which could significantly alleviate the crisis have been delayed.

One is a roughly 200-kilometer (124-mile) pipeline from the Panjshir River north of Kabul, and the other is a planned dam and reservoir known as the Shah Toot Dam about 30 kilometers (18 miles) southwest of the city. Together, they could provide water for around 4 million people, according to the Mercy Corps report.

“A combination of both would be a sustainable solution for the future,” said Sadid. Although constructing the dam would take several years, the pipeline could be completed relatively fast, he said.

Shafiullah Zahid, Kabul Zone Director in Afghanistan’s Urban Water Supply and Sewage state corporation, said the Panjshir pipeline’s roughly $130 million budget has been approved. The original survey, completed under the previous government, “has been completely revised, and now another review is needed,” he said. Once that is completed, “practical work can begin.”

The Shah Toot Dam, announced months before the Taliban takeover, was to have been a joint Afghan-Indian project. It too has run into funding delays. If construction begins, it would take six to seven years to complete, Zahid said.

But Sadid said Afghanistan’s governments, both current and previous, prioritized other infrastructure over critical water projects.

“Numerous roads are being built, flyovers are being built with a lot of money. But there is no priority for water projects,” he said. “They are just doing the projects which are eye-catching and not the projects which are fundamental to the people’s health and people’s fundamental rights. Water is essential. Water is more important than roads.”


Abdul Qahar Afghan in Kabul contributed

Afghanistan’s capital is in the grip of a water crisis
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Afghan migrants in Poland fear forced deportations as asylum applications remain suspended

By CLAUDIA CIOBANU

Associated Press

Rights groups warn the measure, introduced in March 2025, is now being overused by authorities. It’s based on an amended Polish law that imposed temporary restrictions on the right to apply for international protection at the border with Belarus for those who crossed into the NATO and European Union member state illegally.

“I tried more than a billion times to seek safety,” an Afghan in his 20s, currently in a detention center for migrants in eastern Poland, said over the phone. He recounted how the Taliban killed his father, and also detained and beat him up.

The rest of his family is still in hiding in Afghanistan, he said, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he fears for his safety, should he be deported to Afghanistan.

All this he recounted to Polish authorities, he said, “but they did not care.”

The Polish Interior Ministry did not respond to AP requests for comment about the deportations of Afghans and how it applies the new restriction.

Like many of his countrymen, the young Afghan crossed into EU-member Poland from Belarus and managed to reach Germany, where he was arrested and then returned to Poland to have his asylum request assessed under EU laws.

He now says Polish authorities decided to deport him without properly reviewing his case, simply because he had first entered the country by way of Belarus — a fraught route that Warsaw has sought to crack down on after tens of thousands of migrants tried to enter the EU that way in recent years.

Poland says it’s been overwhelmed by the influx and argues that the migrants were sent by Russia and its ally Belarus to destabilize Poland and other Western countries.

The temporary suspension — for a total of 60 days — of the right to seek asylum only applies “on the border with Belarus,” the new legislation says. The government has prolonged this time period multiple times, effectively suspending asylum applications for over a year and more.

A complex legal issue

Legal experts such as the Polish Ombudsman, which protects civil and human rights in Poland, and the UNHCR have criticized Poland’s suspension of the right to asylum.

They say it’s incompatible with international law and especially the Geneva Conventions on refugee rights, which obliges receiving countries to examine each individual’s claim for protection.

Poland’s liberal Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said the security risks at the Belarus border warranted the new measures, an argument the EU did not reject though its member states are required to provide at least a minimum of rights to asylum-seekers even in cases of orchestrated migration crises.

Since the new law was introduced, rights groups and migrants say Poland has been stretching the measure to include not just migrants apprehended on the Belarus-Polish border but those found anywhere in the country — as long as they entered across that border.

In practice, this means that Afghan migrants, whose route to Poland almost always involves Belarus, cannot apply for asylum, regardless of their individual circumstances.

Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights Michael O’Flaherty in a letter, dated April 1 and published Tuesday, to the Polish government expressed his concerns that asylum applications are “suspended in every case in which border guards consider that the person has crossed the Poland-Belarus border irregularly.”

“In this regard, I note information about the recent removal of a group of Afghan nationals from Poland to Afghanistan, who were not provided with an opportunity to lodge asylum applications,” O’Flaherty wrote.

The legal grey area has apparently even made Frontex, the EU border control agency, uncomfortable. Its monitors pulled out from a government-organized deportation flight to Pakistan last year after learning that Polish authorities had not properly assessed the asylum applications of those being deported.

“We have to make sure that people that are returned have fully gone through the entire asylum procedure as per EU law,” said Krzysztof Borowski, spokesperson for Frontex.

Afghans at risk

The young migrant interviewed by the AP is among some 120 Afghans currently in detention centers in Poland. A friend of his, he claimed, was recently deported by Poland back to Afghanistan. His family has not heard from him since.

About 65% of Afghans asking for asylum receive protection in Europe, according to the EU Agency for Asylum, which indicates their applications are mostly successful elsewhere in the bloc.

Tomasz Sieniow, from the nongovernmental Foundation Institute for the Rule of Law, was aboard a flight last Friday that Polish authorities were using to deport nine Afghans back home via Uzbekistan.

He told the AP that the European Court of Human Rights had issued rulings asking Poland not to deport the nine, but that authorities subsequently only took six of the Afghans off the flight.

Sieniow said that most Afghans detained in Poland had worked with the previous, U.S.-allied Afghan government that collapsed when the Taliban overran Afghanistan in August 2021, or with the U.S. or other NATO troops.

These people, and their families, “should not be removed,” said the NGO worker and added that “Poland never analyzed their reasons for asking for protection.”

Afghan migrants in Poland fear forced deportations as asylum applications remain suspended
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Suspected militants kill police officer assigned to guard polio team as nationwide campaign begins

By MUNIR AHMED and ABDUL QAHAR AFGHAN

Associated Press

April 13, 2026

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Suspected militants opened fire on a vehicle carrying police officers assigned to protect polio workers in northwestern Pakistan on Tuesday, killing one of them and wounding four others before fleeing the scene, police said. Two attackers were killed when police returned fire.

The shooting occurred in Hangu, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, shortly after Pakistan launched its second nationwide anti-polio campaign of the year, according to local police official Mahmood Alam.

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but suspicion is likely to fall on the Pakistani Taliban and local militant groups, which often carry out similar attacks in the region and elsewhere. Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan remain the only countries where polio has not been eradicated, according to the World Health Organization.

First lady Aseefa Bhutto Zardari urged families to ensure their children are vaccinated during the weeklong drive, which aims to reach more than 45 million children under 5 across all provinces and regions. She said the campaign will be conducted in coordination with Afghanistan, reflecting a shared commitment to interrupt cross-border transmission and close remaining gaps.

Aseefa is the daughter of President Asif Ali Zardari and former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who was killed in a 2007 gun and bomb attack by militants, and who had personally overseen initiatives aimed at eliminating polio during her tenure. In a statement, she said “Pakistan stands at a crucial moment in the fight against polio.” She said while the country is closer than ever to eradication, “the final stretch remains the most challenging.”

Highlighting recent gains, she said 31 polio cases were reported nationwide in 2025, while only one case has so far been recorded so far this year, but warned against complacency.

While Pakistan primarily uses door-to-door vaccination teams to reach children at their homes, Afghanistan generally relies on fixed vaccination sites and health facilities, where parents are asked to bring their children for immunization.

In Kabul, Sharafat Zaman, spokesperson for the Ministry of Public Health, said the first national polio vaccination campaign of the year has begun in Afghanistan in coordination with international partners, aiming to vaccinate around 12.6 million children under the age of 5 across the country. He said the campaign has been delayed in some areas due to cold weather.

Zaman urged parents, religious scholars and community leaders to ensure maximum participation in the campaign, stressing that polio can only be prevented through vaccination.

Pakistan’s polio eradication program has been running anti-polio campaigns for years, though health workers and the police assigned to protect them are often targeted by militants who falsely claim the vaccination campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.

Authorities have deployed thousands of police officers to protect workers following intelligence warnings of possible attacks. More than 200 polio workers and the police assigned to guard them have been killed in Pakistan since the 1990s, according to officials.

Afghan reported from Kabul. Riaz Khan and Rasool Dawar contributed to this story from Peshawar, Pakistan.

 

Suspected militants kill police officer assigned to guard polio team as nationwide campaign begins
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“There’s no interest”: Iran war worsens and overshadows the crisis in Afghanistan

Ali M. Latifi

​​When the United States and Israel began their military assaults on Iran, it had already been two days since Pakistan declared “open war” on Afghanistan. Only hours before bombs started falling on Tehran, Iran had been offering to serve as a mediator in the escalating flare-up between its two eastern neighbours.

For the next five weeks, Pakistan continued its attacks on urban centres like Kabul, Kandahar, and Asadabad, including a strike on a drug rehabilitation clinic that killed hundreds of civilians. And yet, as the international media focused on the Iran war and global fears of energy price hikes due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, these events went largely unnoticed by the outside world.

The Iran war itself has also dealt an additional blow to an Afghan economy that had been showing some green shoots of recovery. Heavily reliant on food imports along supply chains that have dried up, prices have soared, leading to a growing risk of hunger. Those hikes “place additional pressure on families who are already accumulating debt simply to survive”, a March report from World Vision International warned.

Before the Taliban took back control of the country in 2021, Afghanistan had been heavily reliant of foreign aid, but that funding stream has now collapsed, with President Donald Trump’s US administration specifically excluding Kabul from its international aid spending.

The return of more than 5.2 million Afghans from Iran and Pakistan last year – another situation likely to be exacerbated by the war in Iran – is adding a further strain to an Afghan economy marked by endemic poverty, and a chronic scarcity of jobs.

Thamindri De Silva, the national director for World Vision, said the combination of the war in Iran and the flaring conflict with Pakistan have made an already difficult situation in Afghanistan – where 21.9 million people (45% of people) are in need of humanitarian assistance – much worse; a reality donors seem hesitant to prioritise.

“There’s no interest,” De Silva told The New Humanitarian. “We can’t get major donors to provide funding for the Afghanistan response because the focus now is on Lebanon,” where Israeli strikes have forced one million people to flee.

“Less and less is being earmarked for Afghanistan,” she said, pointing to the fact that the UN’s 2026 humanitarian appeal is still 89% unfunded.

Speaking from Herat, a province that borders Iran, De Silva underlined how Afghanistan had already been dealing with the economic blowback from Pakistani military attacks and the closure since October of vital cross-border trade routes.

Months of building economic pressure

Before the Iran war began on 28 February, Afghanistan was already experiencing double-digit price increases for basic commodities.

“When Pakistan closed its routes, prices immediately shot up by 40%,” said Abdul Hadi, a logistics and procurement manager for private businesses in Herat. Using rice as an example, he said a 10-kilo sack went up from $22 to $39 almost instantly.

This situation was compounded by the global economic downturn that followed the launch of the US-Israeli war on Iran.

Because they only stand to make a one or two percent profit from basic commodities, price hikes have a major impact on local businesses.

Abdur Rahman, a vegetable seller who has operated his cart in Herat for seven years, is feeling the pinch. The 32-year-old said that until recently traders could have relied on the city’s proximity to Iran to make up – at least in part – for the shortages and price increases caused by the Pakistani border closure. Not so anymore, and therefore he and other sellers are having to hike their prices.

“It’s simple business. When you have a lot of products coming in, prices are lower,” Abdur Rahman said.

The economic hit is especially significant in a country like Afghanistan, where imports make up nearly 51% of GDP.

Abdur Rahman pointed to the items on his cart as examples: “Potatoes, tomatoes, and peppers; they all come from Iran,” he said, explaining how each of them had doubled in price over the last 40 days.

Afghanistan’s reliance on its neighbours isn’t limited to basic commodities.

Due to the Islamic Emirate’s recent efforts to boost domestic pharmaceutical production, some medical supplies are available, but healthcare workers in Herat said nearly all their specialised equipment, including diagnostic tools, still has to come from Pakistan and Iran.

“We can get medicine and syringes no problem,” said Mohammad Rafih, who has worked in medical laboratories across Herat for the past 10 years. “We have a lot of specific technical equipment that came from Pakistan and Iran, and now those supplies are running dangerously low.”

Rafih said the shortages have left patients having to go from clinic to clinic to find the right equipment, even for basic tests. He gave the example of a patient who needed a progesterone test who had to go to five clinics before finding one that could do it.

Afghanistan is not alone in suffering price hikes and shortages. Iran, to give just a few examples, has seen a 200% rise in flour costs, while poultry farms have shut down due to lack of electricity and fuel. In Pakistan, meanwhile, the government has had to cut development spendingclose schools, and impose rations on fuel consumption.

A new influx of need?

The World Food Programme (WFP) has warned that any increase in returnees from Iran will “layer humanitarian needs onto an already dire crisis” in Afghanistan.

According to the UN, that number was already on an upswing by February. More than 150,000 Afghans have returned this year, 80% of them driven out by force. At least 26,000 have been deported since the war began.

For many returnees, “coming back to Afghanistan would mean poverty, unemployment, hunger and more instability”, WFP said.

Abdul Hadi, the logistics and procurement manager, said everyone in Herat has relatives who have returned from Iran over the last five weeks of conflict.

“So many are returning because work is at a standstill. Almost no one is producing anything anymore,” Abdul Hadi said.

Most Afghans work in construction, factories, and workshops in Tehran and Isfahan, two of the most heavily targeted cities, making staying in Iran – where prices are soaring and production is at a near standstill – almost impossible, he added.

Additionally, with 1.4 million Afghans living in Iran without documentation, the risk of deportation remains high, even during war time. By early March, it was estimated that 1,700 Afghans were returning from Iran each day.

With Afghanistan’s unemployment rate hovering around 13%, day labourers say they are the most impacted by the high level of returns. “Everywhere you turn, there are now four times as many workers and not even half as much work,” said Rashed, a 22-year-old plasterer.

Unlike Kabul, which is seeing a boom in construction projects, work has come to a virtual halt in Herat, according to Rashed and around two dozen day labourers gathered along an intersection in the city. With Iran’s two largest steel plants having been hit by multiple rounds of US-Israeli airstrikes, and general production down due to attacks on major cities, there is very little construction work left in Herat.

“Before, you would get at least one job a day. Now, we just stand out here for hours and have nothing to show for it,” said Rashed.

De Silva, from World Vision Afghanistan, said rising returnee numbers also means a major decrease in remittances, which average around $129 per month. For millions of families facing chronic poverty, especially outside major cities like Herat, these remittances are a vital lifeline for food, healthcare, and education.

All this, De Silva said, is only adding to the challenges facing Afghanistan, if only anyone would notice. “The impact will only grow as time goes on, but whether it’s the UN or others, they don’t seem to take the situation here seriously,” she said.

Edited by Andrew Gully.

“There’s no interest”: Iran war worsens and overshadows the crisis in Afghanistan
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Afghanistan says talks with Pakistan positive as Türkiye backs improved ties

Afghanistan’s Foreign Ministry said on Sunday that talks with Pakistan had been positive, while Türkiye stressed the importance of stronger ties between Kabul and Islamabad.

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi met Türkiye’s chargé d’affaires in Kabul, Sadin Ayyıldız. The two sides discussed regional developments and recent negotiations held in Ürümqi, China.

The ministry said Muttaqi described Afghanistan’s relations with Türkiye as positive and noted that Ankara’s earlier mediation efforts had been valuable.

Summarising the state of the talks, the ministry said Muttaqi stressed that progress had been made, saying, “So far, the talks have been positive,” and expressed hope that “minor technical issues” would not slow the process.

Türkiye’s position

The Turkish envoy also underlined Ankara’s stance. According to the Afghan ministry, Ayyıldız said positive relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan were of “special importance” to Türkiye and that his country would continue its efforts in that regard.

Pakistan has not publicly commented on the latest meeting. However, in earlier statements on the wider crisis, Pakistani officials said counter-terrorism operations would continue until militant safe havens and cross-border threats were addressed.

The meeting comes days after China said Afghanistan and Pakistan had agreed in Ürümqi not to take steps that would escalate the situation.

According to the United Nations, recent fighting has displaced more than 94,000 people. Around 100,000 people in Nuristan’s Barg-e-Matal and Kamdesh districts have also been cut off from humanitarian assistance.

Afghanistan says talks with Pakistan positive as Türkiye backs improved ties
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UN warns of critical funding shortfall for humanitarian aid in Afghanistan

Ariana News

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The United Nations has raised alarm over a significant funding gap threatening the continuation of humanitarian assistance in Afghanistan, as millions remain in urgent need of support.

According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), only $211 million—equivalent to 12.3 percent—of the required $1.7 billion for Afghanistan’s 2026 humanitarian response plan has been secured so far, leaving 87.7 percent of the funding unmet.

OCHA stressed that the scale of humanitarian needs across the country remains critically high and called on donor nations to take immediate and concrete steps to bridge the funding gap.

The agency noted that the European Commission is currently the largest donor, contributing $62.6 million, followed by the United Kingdom, the Asian Development Bank, Switzerland, and Japan. Other key contributors include Germany, Canada, Denmark, Australia, and Italy.

The report highlights that the food security and agriculture sector faces the largest funding requirement, with only $49.2 million—about 7.6 percent—of the needed $651.1 million secured. In the health sector, $29.6 million has been funded out of a required $190.8 million, while education has received 30.2 percent of its needed budget.

OCHA further warned that several critical sectors remain severely underfunded, including nutrition (2.7 percent), emergency shelter and non-food items (3.4 percent), water and sanitation (4.5 percent), and coordination and support services (7.3 percent). Meanwhile, multipurpose cash assistance has received the highest level of funding at 65.6 percent.

The UN emphasized that despite ongoing international assistance, a substantial gap persists between humanitarian needs and available resources, underscoring the urgency for increased global support to prevent a worsening crisis in Afghanistan.

UN warns of critical funding shortfall for humanitarian aid in Afghanistan
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Fear of Forced Return: Former Military Personnel of Afghanistan Living Under Threat and Uncertainty

Adrina Behzad

Abdul Fattah (pseudonym), a former military member who fled to Pakistan due to security threats, says former military personnel living in Pakistan face serious economic, security, and social difficulties, with their children also denied access to education.

The former soldier adds, “The situation of former military personnel in Pakistan is extremely difficult. We have no access to work, and only a small number are working secretly to meet their basic needs. The children of former military personnel in Pakistan are also denied the right to education, and many families are struggling with visa renewals from the Pakistani government. Several former military personnel have been killed in targeted attacks even inside Pakistan. Those who are sent back to Afghanistan face grave threats, and their lives are in danger.”

Isa Laghmani, another former military member who migrated to Iran due to security threats following the Taliban’s return to power, says he cannot sleep at night and lives in fear of arrest and deportation to Afghanistan. He says, “I swear to God, I cannot sleep day or night. Sleep has become forbidden for me. I am not afraid of hard labor or working as a day laborer, but I fear that I have no residency documents. If they arrest me and send me back to Afghanistan, the Taliban will show me no mercy.”

Laghmani emphasizes that he served his country faithfully during the republic. Criticizing some former officials, he says: “Several former officials who betrayed the country handed it over to the Taliban and left for Western and European countries. They accumulated wealth over these 20 years, while the children of the poor sacrificed their lives for the country, and today no one even asks about them.”

Addressing former government officials, the former soldier says, “You sold the homeland and abandoned the soldiers on the battlefield. We gave martyrs for the homeland, we shed blood, and we made countless sacrifices. Even dry bread was barely available to us, yet we fought on the front lines and secured your safety while you lived in comfort. But in the end, you abandoned us halfway.”

Meanwhile, Shaharzad Akbar, head of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) under the previous government, warns that despite the Taliban’s declaration of a general amnesty, hundreds of cases of abuse, unlawful detention, and killing of former military personnel have been documented since the group’s return to power. Stressing that deporting former military personnel constitutes a violation of refugee rights principles and international law, she says: “Our documentation shows that former military personnel face serious dangers after being returned to Afghanistan. Despite the Taliban having declared a general amnesty, we have recorded hundreds of cases of abuse, unlawful detention, and killing of former military personnel since the group retook power. In many cases, their families have also faced threats and danger. Returning these individuals violates the principles of refugee rights and international law, as it exposes them to dangers, including killing, torture, and detention. Neighboring countries, as well as the allies of the previous government, have a responsibility to protect the lives of former military personnel and to ensure their safe transfer along with their families.”

At the same time, Asif Siddiqui, former deputy speaker of the Senate of the National Assembly, describes the situation of former military personnel as deeply alarming, saying that large numbers of them have been killed and many others are being tortured in Taliban prisons. He adds: “The situation of former military personnel following the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan is extremely alarming. The security threats are directed not only at the individuals themselves, but also at their families. A large number of former military personnel have been killed, and many others are being held and tortured in Taliban prisons. Former military members who have migrated to other countries also face numerous difficulties, including harsh economic conditions, visa renewal problems, and a lack of legal documentation. If these individuals are returned to Afghanistan, they will face serious threats to their lives, with a real risk of being killed or detained.”

Mr. Siddiqui warns that the Taliban have designated special units to target former officials and former military personnel. He says: “In some cases, former military personnel are killed, and these incidents are framed as personal disputes. The Taliban have even established dedicated units for targeting former officials and former military personnel. In addition, the children of these families, whether in Afghanistan or in neighboring countries, are denied the right to education and face discrimination.”

This comes as the United Nations Assistance Mission’s quarterly report, published some time ago, documented at least 14 killings and 21 cases of arbitrary arrest, detention, torture, and mistreatment of former members of Afghanistan’s security and defense forces.

Since retaking Afghanistan, the Taliban have consistently arrested and imprisoned former military personnel, and in some cases have killed them.

According to findings by the Hasht-e Subh Daily, the Taliban killed approximately 110 former military personnel between 2023 and mid-2025.

Fear of Forced Return: Former Military Personnel of Afghanistan Living Under Threat and Uncertainty
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Conference in Vienna spotlights Afghanistan women’s education, rights crisis

A conference in Vienna brought together Afghan and international figures to support women’s rights, highlighting urgent concerns over education restrictions in Afghanistan.

A conference titled “Solidarity of Women for Education and Self-Determination in Afghanistan” was held in Vienna, bringing together Afghan diaspora figures and Austrian officials to highlight the situation of women and girls and push for greater international support.

Participants stressed the urgent need to address restrictions on girls’ education and called for stronger cooperation between Afghan communities in exile and European institutions. The event aimed to raise awareness, strengthen solidarity, and create a platform for dialogue among activists, experts, and policymakers.

The gathering also featured specialized workshops focused on supporting girls’ education and improving the integration of Afghan women into the diaspora labor market, reflecting efforts to address both immediate and long-term challenges.

The event marked the 30th anniversary of the AKIS cultural association and the 26th anniversary of the Bano magazine, drawing participants from Europe and the United States, including cultural, social, and political figures.

Organizers said the conference was designed to amplify the voices of Afghan women and promote coordinated action at an international level.

Afghan women and girls continue to face severe restrictions, including limits on access to secondary and higher education. The conference underscored growing international concern and the need for sustained efforts to protect education and rights for Afghan women and girls.

Conference in Vienna spotlights Afghanistan women’s education, rights crisis
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UNAMA says 11 killed in attack on Shi’ite gathering in Herat

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said at least 11 people were killed and 11 others wounded in a gun attack on a Shi’ite gathering in Herat, with women and children among the victims.

UNAMA said in a statement on Sunday that the attack took place on Friday, when unidentified gunmen opened fire on civilians gathered near a Shi’ite shrine in the Deh Miri area, located between Injil and Zinda Jan districts.

Georgette Gagnon expressed condolences to the victims’ families, describing the incident as a “horrific crime” and wishing a swift recovery for those injured.

She called on the Taliban authorities to conduct a thorough investigation and ensure the protection of all civilians across Afghanistan against armed violence.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, and Taliban officials have not yet publicly commented on the incident, raising concerns about accountability and security.

Attacks targeting Shi’ite communities in Afghanistan have occurred repeatedly in recent years, often blamed on extremist groups, increasing fears among minority populations.

Rights organizations, including Rawadari, have previously reported that killings of civilians in Herat were “targeted and organized,” while also citing lack of transparency in casualty reporting.

The latest attack underscores ongoing security challenges in Afghanistan, highlighting urgent calls for protection of minorities and credible investigations into violence against civilians.

UNAMA says 11 killed in attack on Shi’ite gathering in Herat
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UN expert calls for probe into deadly attack on Shiite civilians in western Afghanistan

Khaama Press

A UN expert has called for an independent investigation into a deadly attack on Shiite civilians in Herat, urging accountability for those responsible.

Richard Bennett has called for an independent investigation into a deadly armed attack targeting Shiite civilians in Injil district of Herat, describing the incident as deeply concerning and requiring urgent accountability.

He said the attack, which left several civilians dead and wounded, must be strongly condemned and thoroughly investigated, stressing that those responsible should be identified and brought to justice.

The call comes after gunmen opened fire on civilians gathered in the Deh Mirai area, in an incident that local authorities said killed at least 11 people, although exact casualty figures remain unclear.

The attack targeted civilians who had gathered for leisure, highlighting ongoing risks faced by minority communities in parts of western Afghanistan.

No group has claimed responsibility so far, but similar attacks in recent years have often targeted Shiite communities, raising concerns about recurring patterns of violence.

Herat has seen repeated attacks on minority groups, with previous incidents linked to militant groups targeting Shiite civilians.

The latest attack underscores persistent security challenges and the urgent need for accountability to prevent further violence against vulnerable communities.

UN expert calls for probe into deadly attack on Shiite civilians in western Afghanistan
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