Traders end monthslong protest at Pakistan-Afghan border crossing

The Chaman border crossing on the Pakistan-Afghan border reopened Monday after small traders ended a nine-month sit-in protest. The border had been closed due to a Pakistani government decision to implement a visa and passport program for travelers on both sides.

Initial reports indicate that small traders can now resume crossing with Pakistani and/or Afghan identity documents. Abdul Hadi, a trader, told VOA that the sit-in ended Sunday and that he crossed into Afghanistan on Tuesday.

The protesters’ committee spokesperson, Sadiq Achakzai, told VOA that Chaman Sit-in Committee members held talks with military leadership to resolve the issue. However, no official notification regarding the change has been issued by the government.

Former Balochistan caretaker interior minister Inayat Ullah Kahan Kasi, who mediated talks between Pakistan’s government and protesters, played a crucial role in ending the 9-month protest.

“I do not represent any government authority but government and security agencies assigned me the job to end the protest and I did it,” Kasi said.

Balochistan government spokesperson Shahid Rind refused to discuss the issue when VOA contacted him.

Pakistani officials have said that cross-border movement must be regulated to improve security and control smuggling.

Pashtun tribes straddling both sides of the British-era border’s Durand Line have historically moved freely for businesses and communal life.

A surge in violence in Pakistan since the Taliban took over in Afghanistan nearly three years ago has triggered security concerns and Pakistani government officials have insisted the border must be regulated.

Pakistani officials have blamed the Afghan Taliban for sheltering terror group Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) which, according to Pakistani authorities, carries out cross-border attacks targeting Pakistani security forces. The Taliban denies the accusations.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the spokesperson for the Afghan interim government, said recently in an interview with Khurasan Diaries, a Pakistani digital news platform, that border trade issues and other matters should be dealt with separately.

Pakistan’s military said in a statement July 16 that eight soldiers were killed when a suicide bomber rammed his explosive-laden vehicle into an army compound in Bannu, a remote city in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

A splinter group of Pakistani Taliban, led by militant commander Gul Bahadur, claimed responsibility for the attack.

Traders end monthslong protest at Pakistan-Afghan border crossing
read more

Pakistan and UNHCR collaborate on sustainable solutions for Afghan refugees

Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar held a telephonic conversation with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, on Friday.

During the call, they discussed matters related to the cooperation between Pakistan and UNHCR.

The conversation also covered the recent attacks and violent demonstrations by the Afghan diaspora against Pakistan’s diplomatic missions in Frankfurt, London, and Brussels.

The High Commissioner commended Pakistan’s traditional hospitality towards Afghan refugees and the recent decision to extend the validity of Proof of Registration (POR) cards.

Both Ishaq Dar and the High Commissioner agreed to continue their collaboration to advance Pakistan-UNHCR cooperation and work towards a lasting solution for Afghan refugees.

The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation of Afghanistan recently announced that Pakistan has extended the validity of POR cards for Afghan refugees for another year.

On Thursday, July 25, the Afghan Commissioner for Refugees in Islamabad confirmed that the new validity of the POR cards is from June 1, 2024, to June 30, 2025.

Despite the extension, Afghan refugees are increasingly concerned about the potential for forced deportation, as the Pakistani government has been deporting over two thousand individuals daily.

The extension of POR cards provides temporary relief to Afghan refugees in Pakistan, but ongoing tensions and the risk of deportation continue to create uncertainty. Both Pakistan and UNHCR are committed to addressing these challenges and seeking sustainable solutions.

The situation underscores the need for international cooperation and support to ensure the safety and rights of Afghan refugees, who remain in a precarious position amid broader humanitarian concerns.

Pakistan and UNHCR collaborate on sustainable solutions for Afghan refugees
read more

Acting Minister of Interior Announces Increase in Police Force to 230,000

Khalifa Sirajuddin Haqqani, the Acting Minister of Interior, who was speaking to a ceremony praising the security forces said that the number of police personnel in the ministry has increased to 230,000.

Haqqani also stated that coordination among security institutions is a prominent indicator of security establishment in the country.

“The police structure of the Ministry of Interior is a national structure composed of all brotherly ethnic groups of Afghanistan, and their number now reaches 230,000,” the acting minister said.

This senior security official of the Islamic Emirate also emphasized that the forces of the Islamic Emirate are responsible for ensuring security throughout the country, and no unauthorized person has the right to carry weapons.

According to Haqqani, legal action will be taken against those who carry weapons without a permit.

“No one, except responsible individuals, has the right to carry weapons without a permit. Outside the Emirate’s structure, whether security companies, traders, the private sector, or any individual who wants to carry weapons, they will be allowed to do so only after obtaining a permit.” Added Haqqani.

Mohammad Mateen Mohammadi, a military affairs expert, told TOLOnews, “Education and training have a direct impact compared to merely having a large composition and number; the professionalism and expertise of security forces are important.”

The Acting Minister of Interior considered the implementation of projects such as TAPI, CASA-1000, Mes Aynak, railway projects, and mining extraction as indicators of overall security in the country.

Acting Minister of Interior Announces Increase in Police Force to 230,000
read more

Abdul Haq Wasiq: Intelligence Networks Still Operating in Afghanistan

Wasiq, speaking at a “Program for Praising Security Forces,” added that efforts are ongoing to identify and arrest these networks.

Abdul Haq Wasiq, the General Director of Islamic Emirate Intelligence, said that no groups other than intelligence networks are active in Afghanistan.

Wasiq, speaking at a “Program for Praising Security Forces,” added that efforts are ongoing to identify and arrest these networks.

The General Director of Intelligence said: “From the intelligence side, there are still some networks operating, and you and I must, with full strength and in cooperation with each other, stop the enemy as we have done in the past so that their hopes are completely dashed.”

“Afghan soil is not used against any country or neighbors, so we can say that there are no terrorist groups in our country,” said Hadi Quraishi, a military analyst.

Abdul Haq Wasiq also stressed that for the first time, a law has been created for the General Directorate of Intelligence, and violations of this law are considered a crime.

Abdul Haq Wasiq added: “For the first time in Afghanistan’s history, a comprehensive law has been created for better regulation of the affairs of the Directorate of Intelligence, and all provisions of this law are based on the Sharia system and the Hanafi jurisprudence.”

At the same time, the Acting Minister of Defense has emphasized that they will not accept any commands other than those from the leader of the Islamic Emirate.

Acting Minister of Defense Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid said: “Accepting anyone’s commands is unacceptable, and we are in obedience to our leader, and we will not take orders from anyone else.”

The acting Minister of Defense also added that the leader of the Islamic Emirate has repeatedly ordered serious attention to be given to the security challenges of the country’s citizens.

Abdul Haq Wasiq: Intelligence Networks Still Operating in Afghanistan
read more

Pakistan’s Envoy Urges Afghanistan to Act Against TTP

According to Durrani, Islamabad seeks peace and stability in Afghanistan.

Asif Ali Durrani, Pakistan’s special representative for Afghanistan, has called on the Islamic Emirate to take effective measures against the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) at a meeting at the Institute of Regional Studies (IRS) in Pakistan.

 Durrani claimed at the meeting that terrorism originates from Afghanistan, which is concerning for all countries, especially neighboring countries.

According to Durrani, Islamabad seeks peace and stability in Afghanistan.

The Special Representative for Afghanistan at the Institute of Regional Studies (IRS) said: “Terrorism emanating out of Afghanistan was a concern not only for Pakistan but other neighboring countries like China, Iran, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan as well.”

Political analysts said that the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is an internal issue of Pakistan, and its officials should not link it to Afghanistan.

Saleem Paigham, a political analyst, told TOLOnews: “Pakistan itself is a hub of terrorism and terrorism exists there. It continues to nurture terrorism and trains against the territories of China, Afghanistan, India, and Central Asian countries.”

“It is necessary for the Afghan government to use strong diplomacy and prove to the world that Afghanistan is safe and there are no security problems here,” said Moeen Gul Samkanai, a political analyst.

However, the Islamic Emirate has said that Afghanistan’s soil is safe for all countries of the world.

“Afghanistan is now safe, and there is no threat from Afghanistan to other countries. Additionally, no group is allowed to operate in Afghanistan,” said Hamdullah Fitrat, deputy spokesperson of the Islamic Emirate.

The Islamic Emirate has previously pledged that Afghanistan’s soil is safe for all countries of the world.

Pakistan’s Envoy Urges Afghanistan to Act Against TTP
read more

Senior Security Officials Pledge Afghanistan ‘Not a Threat’

Haqqani added that currently no group can threaten the existing Sharia system in the country.

Khalifa Sirajuddin Haqqani, the acting Interior Minister, said today (Thursday, July 25) at the “Program for Praising Security Forces,” that no military or terrorist group, including ISIS, exists in Afghanistan.

Haqqani added that currently no group can threaten the existing Sharia system in the country.

In this program, the acting Interior Minister said: “No force called rebels, [armed opposition] or ISIS exists in Afghanistan that can threaten the Sharia system [Islamic Emirate], because scientifically and jurisprudentially, rebels and Khawarij are those who are established in a specific geography and oppose the regulations of the Sharia system.”

According to Haqqani, it is imperative under the Sharia system to prevent all factors that cause societal instability.

Meanwhile, Mawlawi Muhammad Yaqoob Mujahid, the acting Defense Minister, said at this program that the current Afghan government will soon take control of the country’s airspace.

The acting Defense Minister added: “Just as we have full sovereignty over the land, we will also have sovereignty over the airspace shortly.”

At the same time, the acting Director General of Intelligence, who was present at this program, said that Afghanistan is a target of destructive actions by some groups based and operating in neighboring countries and the region. Abdul Haq Wasiq emphasized that if the world ignores these centers, they will pay a heavy price.

Abdul Haq Wasiq, Director of the General Directorate of Intelligence, said: “Afghanistan is a victim of the destructive activities of some groups that have bases and operate in the neighboring countries and the region. For their destructive actions, these corrupt individuals come to Afghanistan and spread propaganda. If the world does not become aware of these centers, they may pay a heavy price in the near future due to this negligence and face dangerous consequences.”

The Director of the General Directorate of Intelligence also said that the reports of some organizations regarding the presence and activities of terrorist groups on Afghan soil are not true, and this negative propaganda is spread by regional intelligence groups to mislead public opinion.

Abdul Haq Wasiq added: “Some international organizations publish false reports about the presence and activities of some groups in Afghanistan. This information is given to them by some regional and global intelligence networks that cannot tolerate the Islamic Sharia system governing the Afghan people and the current strong security and economic opportunities.”

Senior officials of security institutions emphasized that under any circumstances, they will jointly defend against anti-security elements, and protect the territorial integrity and airspace and land of Afghanistan.

Senior Security Officials Pledge Afghanistan ‘Not a Threat’
read more

Islamic Emirate: Citizens’ Security Ensured, Afghanistan’s Territory Secure

Acting Minister of Interior, mentioned that they have destroyed ISIS in Afghanistan and have ensured the country’s security with limited resources.

Some officials of the Islamic Emirate, on the final day of the National Labor Conference, reiterated that Afghanistan’s territory will not be used against any country.

The acting Ministers of Defense and Interior said on the second day of the conference that while Afghanistan has limited resources, it enjoys good security, and opposition groups in the country have been eliminated.

The Deputy Prime Minister for Administrative Affairs, Abdul Salam Hanafi, said: “After the return of the Islamic Emirate, Afghanistan’s land will not be used against the security of any country, and we seek good relations with all neighbors, regional countries, and beyond based on mutual respect and interaction.”

Mawlawi Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid, acting Minister of Defense, said that they have a great responsibility to ensure the security of the country and its citizens and will spare no effort in this regard.

The acting Minister of Defense added: “We work day and night to ensure the security of every citizen of the country at any cost, defend it, and protect its dignity. We safeguard their property, children, and honor.”

Khalifa Sirajuddin Haqqani, acting Minister of Interior, mentioned that they have destroyed ISIS in Afghanistan and have ensured the country’s security with limited resources.

The acting Minister of Interior further said: “The only concern was that Afghanistan posed a threat and a problem; but today, this concern and threat no longer exist. Any number of malicious and corrupt individuals have been eliminated.”

The acting Minister of Foreign Affairs criticized neighboring countries and the world on Tuesday, the first day of the National Labor Conference, stating that they always emphasize the Islamic Emirate’s fight against terrorism and narcotics but have not cooperated with the Islamic Emirate in these areas.

Islamic Emirate: Citizens’ Security Ensured, Afghanistan’s Territory Secure
read more

When Pakistan Tightened a Border, Thousands of Lives Were Upended

Zia ur-Rehman and 

Zia ur-Rehman reported from Chaman, Pakistan, and Christina Goldbaum from London.

The New York Times

July 23, 2024

Traders in Chaman have done business in Afghanistan for generations, but that stopped when officials made it much harder to cross.
Want to stay updated on what’s happening in Afghanistan and Pakistan? , and we’ll send our latest coverage to your inbox.

For most of Abdul Manan’s life, the border dividing Afghanistan and Pakistan was little more than a line on a map. Like generations of men before him, Mr. Manan, 55, commuted every day from his mud-brick home on the Pakistan side to the wheat field his family had cultivated for decades in Afghanistan. His four sons crossed the border with him, transporting electronics and groceries from markets on one side to homes on the other.

It was a journey shared by tens of thousands of residents in the Pakistani town of Chaman, the site of the last official border crossing where people could pass through using only their national identity card from Pakistan. Then, in October, the gates slammed shut.

Pakistani officials say the restrictions are a necessary security measure — though most of the travel originates on their side of the border — as the country has grappled with a resurgence of cross-border militant violence since the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in 2021.

For the first time since the border was drawn over a century ago, the Pakistani authorities are requiring residents to show a passport and visa before crossing — paperwork that virtually none of them have, they say.

The rules have upended their daily lives. Small traders say they have been effectively locked out of their shops, where their goods rot and bills for shuttered stores mount. Farmers have missed out on wheat harvests, leaving them unable to feed their families, they say. Porters, who once earned up to $3.50 a day by transporting goods like electrical items and groceries on their backs or on hand trolleys, have lost their only source of income.

In recent weeks, Chaman has erupted in violent protests as residents demand that the restrictions be lifted. “Everything has been taken from us. The land is now inaccessible,” Mr. Manan, 55, said. “We are starving.”

Mr. Manan is one of thousands who have gathered every morning since late October at a makeshift protest camp two miles from the border crossing. Throughout the day, the demonstration’s leaders shout speeches to the crowds, which roar with applause. They break only briefly for midday prayers before gathering again until sunset.

The tensions boiled over in mid-June, after security forces were called in to clear protesters who had blocked the main highway linking Chaman to Quetta, the provincial capital 75 miles away. The officers clashed with the protesters, leaving more than 40 people injured.

In the days that followed, the two sides tried to negotiate but government forces arrested protest leaders, generating accusations that the authorities had invited them for talks as a trap. Pakistani officials say that the arrests were necessary after attacks on paramilitary forces and attempts to seize government buildings.

Negotiations resumed last week and, on Sunday, the government released protest leaders in exchange for a temporary end to the daily protests at the border.

Negotiators also announced that the government would once again allow local tribesmen to cross the border with only a national identity card. But Pakistani officials have not issued an official statement on the issue and many observers are skeptical as to whether they will in fact restore the old system.

For generations, Pashtun tribes living along the rugged frontier traversed the area freely, their lives woven together by shared ancestry and culture, as well as economic dependence.

In 1893, British colonial officials established the Durand Line, a 1,600-mile border dividing Afghanistan and British India. Border tribes continued to cross freely, a tradition that persisted even after the creation of Pakistan in 1947. Extended families lived on either side of the line, crossing to dance at weddings or offer condolences at funerals.

“The only real sign that you had crossed into Afghanistan was the sudden switch in driving sides — from the left in Pakistan to the right in Afghanistan,” said Abdul Rauf, 42, a trader who runs his family’s plastic supply business across the border in Afghanistan.

Pakistani officials first introduced restrictions on the border crossing after the U.S. military invaded Afghanistan in 2001. American forces were concerned about the movements of Taliban fighters.

Two years later, the Pakistani authorities built the so-called Friendship Gate in Chaman, a large concrete gateway along the main highway connecting Chaman to Spin Boldak, the nearest town in Afghanistan.

As the years passed, the constraints tightened further. Border crossings were restricted to 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day. Pakistanis from Chaman, in Balochistan Province, and Afghans living in Kandahar Province over the border were required to show their national identity cards to cross. Porters — an essential work force of around 15,000 people — needed special paperwork issued by Pakistan’s border security officials.

And in 2017, a larger border fence was constructed, limiting movement through the dozens of informal crossings along the border. People living close to the fence either relocated or obtained a security pass to travel from one side of their village to the other.

Pakistani officials said that the most recent border restrictions were necessary to prevent militants from the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, or T.T.P., from infiltrating Pakistan from Afghan soil.

Since the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan three years ago, violence by the T.T.P. and other militant groups has surged in Pakistan, stoking tensions between the two countries. The Pakistani authorities have accused the Afghan Taliban of providing safe haven to Pakistani militants, a claim that Taliban officials deny.

“These measures aim to strengthen border management and prevent terrorists from entering the country from Afghanistan,” said Shahid Rind, a provincial government spokesman.

But tribes complain that the restrictions have also decimated their livelihoods and, if they remain in place, will forever reshape the fabric of communities.

Mr. Rauf, the trader, said he has not been able to visit his shops across the border for the past several months. “The plastic merchandise I stored outdoors is ruined, and the bills for closed shops — electricity, security — keep piling up,” said Mr. Rauf, who estimated losses exceeding $1,180.

Beyond trade, family ties that span the border have been strained, as people cannot visit graveyards, attend weddings and share in celebrations.

Activities that are “an obligation in Pashtun society” have become “impossible,” said Iftikhar Noorzai, 23, a porter. He said that he had not seen his two sisters, who are married to men in Kandahar, during two Eid festivals.

Even though the Pakistani government promises to help with passport applications, the greatest challenge for most Chaman residents is proving their Pakistani citizenship. The authorities require documents dating back to the 1970s, which many cannot provide.

Human rights groups have urged the government to find a way to balance national security needs and the rights of residents to maintain their livelihoods.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, an independent watchdog, urged “immediate engagement with the affected communities, all stakeholders and Afghan representatives through dialogue and diplomacy” to resolve the issue.

At the protest camp in Chaman, families are exhausted and worried. “Will I ever get back to my land? What will become of my sons if the border stays closed?” said Mr. Manan, the farmer. “We can only pray for a solution that shows mercy on the poor like us.”

Christina Goldbaum is the Afghanistan and Pakistan bureau chief for The Times, leading the coverage of the region. 

A version of this article appears in print on July 25, 2024 with the headline: Border Policy In Pakistan Upends Lives Of Thousands.
When Pakistan Tightened a Border, Thousands of Lives Were Upended
read more

‘The Taliban tried to silence us’: the musicians who escaped to Portugal

 in Braga

Astone’s throw from Portugal’s oldest cathedral and buzzing bakeries serving up pastéis de nata, the complex notes of a sitar fill the ground floor of an unassuming building in the northern city of Braga.

The soft strumming belies the radical nature of the mission that has taken root here: to preserve Afghan music and use it as a tool to counter those who want to eradicate it.

“The Taliban tried to silence us,” said Ahmad Sarmast, the director of the Afghanistan National Institute of Music, in his new office in Braga. “But we’re much stronger and much louder than yesterday.”

Launched in 2010 under the US-backed government in Kabul, the institute once stood as a powerful sign of the changes sweeping Afghanistan. Young male and female musicians – several of them from poor backgrounds – performed together in ensembles that ranged from a national symphony orchestra to Zohra, the country’s first all-female orchestra.

They toured the world, offering up a singular blend of Afghan and western music as they reclaimed the country’s music traditions and directly challenged the years of silence enforced by the Taliban. “It was a symbol of progress, of human rights and of women’s empowerment,” Sarmast said.

The institute’s future, however, and that of its young musicians, went dark in August 2021 as the Taliban returned to power.

Ramiz Safa, 20, was in a shop in Kabul, waiting for his rubab – an Afghan stringed instrument – to be repaired when news broke that the Taliban were back. “Everyone was running. Someone came to us and said: ‘You have to get away, because this is a music shop,’” he said. “I took my rubab and I ran.”

He hid his instruments as soon as he got home. Soon after, he went one step further, heading to a barber shop to change his appearance as much as possible. “It was really scary,” he said.The Taliban’s return came as Sarmast was on holiday in Australia. From 6,000 miles (9,500km) away, he scrambled to figure out how best to protect the 280 or so people affiliated with the institute.

“Our school was on the top of the Taliban’s hit list,” he said. For years the institute had been targeted by the Taliban, who went as far as to plant a bomb at a 2014 concert, killing one person and leaving Sarmast badly injured.

Sarmast feared there was little chance the musicians and staff would be spared. Working in tandem with the US-based foundation that supports the institute, he contacted everyone he could think of, pleading with politicians and heads of state for help.

Only one country responded immediately: Portugal, setting off a months-long struggle that would eventually allow 273 people, including musicians, instructors and staff, to make the 4,000-mile journey to western Europe.

They arrived during the Covid pandemic, forcing Portuguese officials to pile on restrictions and confinements as they worked through the logistics of settling the large group. “They did everything to receive us warmly,” Sarmast said.

The young musicians, most of whom had been evacuated without their families, reeled from homesickness and culture shock as Portuguese courts wrangled with the question of how best to handle the unaccompanied minors.

“At first it was really hard,” said Farida Ahmadi, 15. “A new culture, new home, new language.” To her, Lisbon seemed large and confusing, and the task of learning Portuguese daunted her.

As initial plans to house them for a few weeks in a Lisbon military hospital stretched to eight months, morale plummeted, Sarmast said. “The kids were extremely disappointed, frustrated, facing cultural conflicts and the trauma of being separated from their families.”

Many were haunted by what they had left behind. “Every night I had dreams about the Taliban,” Safa said. “Now, day by day, it’s getting better.”Several musicians and staff decided to leave, hoping to find better opportunities in places such as Germany, or to reunite with extended family further afield.

Citing the lack of accommodation and cost of living in Lisbon, Portuguese courts eventually decided the group should be moved to northern Portugal, Sarmast said.

About 70 musicians and staff now live in Braga, Portugal’s third largest city. The unaccompanied minors are in the care of two institutions and attend local schools, while those aged over 18 attend classes at the music conservatory. Weekends are spent at the conservatory, honing the institute’s various ensembles.

On a Thursday evening this spring, a dozen or so students drifted through a set of rooms rented by the institute, gathering in groups to practice the sitar and rubab, study music theory and – during breaks – enthuse about the music of Ed Sheeran or finish homework assignments.More than two years after arriving, Farida said she had become used to the sights, sounds and smells of Portugal and could speak the language. “Now we are progressing,” the violin player said. “And it’s something really amazing for us.”

Even more exciting is what lies ahead: last year the institute obtained approval from the Portuguese government for the families of the musicians to join them. While a timeline has yet to be set, it is a tantalising possibility after years of separation. “We are waiting for that,” Sarmast said. “All the kids will be reunited with their families.”

In August the students will perform at Carnegie Hall, in New York, and the Kennedy Center, in Washington DC. The mention evokes a bittersweet smile from Sarmast, who points out that the last time they performed in those halls was in 2013, heralding an Afghanistan where hope, freedom and women’s rights were beginning to make headway.

“This time I’m going there with a different message,” he said. “To let the world know about what’s happening in Afghanistan and to call on the international community to make sure the Taliban are not recognised.”

Since the Taliban regained power, the country has deteriorated into what Sarmast described as a “gender apartheid”, with women’s access to education, work and public spaces steadily curtailed. Earlier this year, the Taliban announced it would resume publicly stoning women to death.

Many of the country’s musicians and artists have fled, while those who remain live in terror. “Afghanistan is a totally silent nation,” Sarmast said. “Today, learning music is a crime. Playing music is again a crime. Listening to music is again a crime.”

The crackdown has amplified the importance of the institute and turned Braga into one of the few places in the world where Afghanistan’s rich music history is being preserved. “If the Taliban remains in power long enough, within five, 10 years, many of these musical traditions will be lost, because Afghan music is an oral tradition,” Sarmast said.

The situation has lent new importance to the institute’s performances around the world. “So now these kids are not just playing music,” he said. “They’re serving also as the voices of the Afghan people.”

‘The Taliban tried to silence us’: the musicians who escaped to Portugal
read more

US diplomat urges people of Afghanistan to decide on the Taliban system

The U.S. chargé d’affaires stated that during the Doha meeting, the Taliban told global representatives that the current situation in Afghanistan reflects what the people want.

Karen Decker mentioned that it is now up to the people of Afghanistan to clarify whether the Taliban’s system is what they want.

However, the people of Afghanistan have consistently demanded respect for women’s rights, including education, work, and freedom of movement, as well as an inclusive government and respect for the country’s diversity. Despite these demands, the current regime has responded with repressive policies amid significant criticism.

On Monday, July 22, Decker emphasized to reporters that the primary concern for representatives from 25 countries and three regional organizations at the Doha meeting was the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan.

Decker noted that throughout the Doha discussions, women’s issues were central, and all representatives warned that Afghanistan could not succeed by excluding half of its population.

According to the U.S. diplomat, Zabihullah Mujahid, a trusted spokesperson of the Taliban leader based in Kandahar, heard from all representatives that Afghanistan cannot succeed by sidelining half its population.

At the meeting, the Taliban emphasized the removal of sanctions and the provision of development aid.

Decker indicated that the lifting of sanctions and the release of Afghanistan’s foreign reserves are among the Taliban’s demands, but the international community has not responded positively to these requests.

Meanwhile, Decker affirmed, “We have not yielded to the Taliban’s demands. They want foreign reserves released, sanctions lifted, and Afghanistan’s UN seat granted to them, but none of these things have happened.”

She added that the U.S. consistently highlights the Taliban’s human rights record in various meetings, stating that Afghanistan cannot join the international community unless the Taliban fulfills its international obligations.

Among these obligations, Decker mentioned allowing girls and women access to education and the right to work.

Decker responded to criticisms regarding humanitarian aid being sent to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, stating that the U.S. does not want to use food as a weapon.

She concluded that the complexities of Afghanistan’s issues are profound, and the UN is considering appointing a special representative to address these challenges, emphasizing that this appointment remains a strong possibility.

US diplomat urges people of Afghanistan to decide on the Taliban system
read more