Afghan Quake Survivors Face Staggering Health Consequences

FILE - A 12-year-old injured during a recent earthquake receives treatment at a hospital in Herat, Afghanistan, on Oct. 11, 2023. The World Health Organization said on Oct. 20 that the survivors of the series of quakes desperately need essential health services.
FILE – A 12-year-old injured during a recent earthquake receives treatment at a hospital in Herat, Afghanistan, on Oct. 11, 2023. The World Health Organization said on Oct. 20 that the survivors of the series of quakes desperately need essential health services.
 

The World Health Organization warns that tens of thousands of survivors of a series of powerful 6.3 magnitude earthquakes that struck western Afghanistan’s Herat province between October 7 and 15 are in desperate need of humanitarian aid and essential health services.

“I have personally seen how these multiple earthquakes flattened villages, displaced thousands of people and left many families in urgent need of humanitarian and health assistance,” said Alaa AbouZeid, health emergencies team lead for WHO Afghanistan.

Speaking in Kabul on Friday, AbouZeid said, “Over 114,000 people are in urgent need of lifesaving health assistance. … The health consequences are staggering.”

Those most seriously affected by the disaster, he said, are women, girls, boys and the elderly, “who account for over 90% of the deaths and injuries. Many children are left orphaned.”

The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, reports that the earthquakes directly affected more than 66,000 people — about 1,500 killed, some 2,000 injured, at least 3,700 homes destroyed and another 21,300 buildings damaged.

“I have talked to people affected by earthquakes, and the sense of loss is heartbreaking,” said Luo Dapeng, WHO representative in Afghanistan. “Many people spent days digging under the rubble to search for members who either died or got injured.”

According to an initial assessment by the WHO, at least 40 health facilities across nine districts were damaged, resulting in severe disruptions of health services for an estimated 580,000 people.

AbouZeid said health providers were afraid to go into those buildings, which showed visible cracks and risked collapse. “So, most health services for now are provided from tents,” he said, calling the situation untenable.

“We need immediate action to restore, renovate and ensure services that provide health facilities, especially in wintertime. The survivors need water [and] better shelters that can protect them from the harsh winter,” he said.

“Last year, Herat experienced minus 30 degrees centigrade during wintertime, and winter has already started in Afghanistan,” he said. “So, there are needs for water and sanitation to stop any possible disease outbreaks.”

He said that WHO staff in Afghanistan was on the ground within hours of the disaster and able to treat the injured, provide medicine and medical supplies, and give mental health and trauma care.

“Thanks to the long and established presence in Herat, we were able to rapidly mobilize resources … and extend immediate lifesaving support to the affected population at the most critical time of the emergency.”

He said the WHO has deployed 21 female health workers, including doctors and midwives, to Herat to ensure that women have unimpeded access to the health services they need.

“They have been distributed over different facilities to provide services for their female patients, with a special focus on reproductive health services, obstetrics, gynecology services and child health services,” AbouZeid said.

The WHO launched an appeal for $7.9 million Wednesday to provide urgent and essential health services for 114,000 of the most vulnerable people in the next six months.

AbouZeid said the WHO needs to scale up emergency health needs urgently and swiftly “as the upcoming winter season is bringing new health risks and exposure to the affected population currently living outdoors or in tents.”

Afghan Quake Survivors Face Staggering Health Consequences
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Islamic Emirate Rejects SIGAR’s Report on Afghanistan Aid

The Deputy Spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, Bilal Karimi, said that the current government regulates all issues based on the interests of the country.

The Islamic Emirate responded to SIGAR’s report claiming that “the Taliban indirectly benefit from U.S.-funded education assistance” by stating that the organization’s findings are wildly inaccurate.

The Deputy Spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, Bilal Karimi, said that the current government regulates all issues based on the interests of the country.

“This administration’s statements about the issues of Afghanistan are far from truth. The Islamic Emirate regulates all the issues and affairs and everything that is going on in Afghanistan according to the principles and interests of its country,” Karimi noted.

This comes as the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan (SIGAR), said in its recent report that the Islamic Emirate indirectly benefits from US-funded education assistance.

“The Taliban benefit from U.S. education funding through the establishment of fraudulent NGOs to receive donor assistance, and by infiltrating and extorting existing Afghan NGOs delivering educational assistance,” the report reads.

According to SIGAR’s report, “Even boys’ secondary school attendance decreased by more than 10 percent in eight provinces. In addition, a chancellor of one private university told SIGAR that immediately following August 2021, the university lost 50 percent of its enrolled students and that all woman’s educational programs at the university.”

The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan (SIGAR) said the current Afghan government policies have also “limited students’ access to education because restrictions on women teachers have caused staffing shortages.”

Meanwhile, some economists gave various views regarding SIGAR’s report.

“I think that, from the start, America and its allies have known that the Islamic Emirate in Afghanistan has access to the thirty to forty million dollars that are sent there every week in addition to other forms of aid,” said Seiyar Qureshi, an economist.

Previously, the UN Security Council said in a report that 56 humanitarian aid programs in Afghanistan have been stopped due to the intervention of the Islamic Emirate.

However, the Islamic Emirate has said that they only provide security for relief organizations and do not interfere in the internal affairs of the organizations.

Islamic Emirate Rejects SIGAR’s Report on Afghanistan Aid
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WFP: In Afghanistan 15M Don’t Know Where Next Meal Will Come From

Harald Mannhardt, Deputy Country Director of WFP Afghanistan, said that many children in Afghanistan come to school without breakfast.

The World Food Programme (WFP) said that in Afghanistan 15 million people – or one third of the population – do not know where their next meal will come from.

Harald Mannhardt, Deputy Country Director of WFP Afghanistan, said that many children in Afghanistan come to school without breakfast.

”Many children in Afghanistan come to school without breakfast and WFP’s school feeding programme provides their first meal of the day. School feeding is an important part of our activities in the country, where 15 million people – or one third of the population – do not know where their next meal will come from,” Mannhardt added.

Meanwhile, the EU in a statement announced that “the European Union is allocating an additional EUR 9.9 million to the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) to support nearly 2 million primary school students in Nangarhar, Nuristan, Ghor, Farah, and Jawzjan provinces over two years.”

The statement quoted Raffaella Iodice, the EU Chargée d’Affaires a.i. to Afghanistan saying: “Learning with an empty stomach is hard. The school feeding programme in Afghanistan helps increase enrollment, attendance, and retention in primary school, for boys and girls. School feeding improves learning abilities and the well-being of the children who are the next generation of Afghanistan.”

According to the EU statement, this money will be spent to support nearly 2 million primary school students in Nangarhar, Nuristan, Ghor, Farah, and Jawzjan provinces over two years.

“This aid should be given to their families on a regular basis so that they can take care of the nutrition, food, and clothing of the students in a regular and very basic manner,” said Shaker Yaqoobi, an economist.

“They should make more concrete efforts and positive changes as much as possible in the dialogue with the Afghan government in terms of creating educational opportunities and decreasing the level of restrictions,” said Bahram Ramish, another economist.

This comes as earlier some international organizations expressed their concerns about the situation of children, especially elementary school students, and requested more aid for their support.

WFP: In Afghanistan 15M Don’t Know Where Next Meal Will Come From
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UK’s FCDO Advises Against All Travel to Afghanistan

FCDO said in a statement that travel to Afghanistan is dangerous due to security threats and the possibility of more attacks on religious sites and airports.

The UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) advised its citizens not to travel to Afghanistan.

FCDO said in a statement that travel to Afghanistan is dangerous due to security threats and the possibility of more attacks on religious sites and airports.

“Terrorists are very likely to try to carry out attacks in Afghanistan. There is a heightened threat of terrorist attacks in or around religious sites and during religious events and celebrations. The security situation in Afghanistan is volatile. There is an ongoing and high threat of terrorist attacks throughout Afghanistan, including around airports,” the statement reads.

However, the Islamic Emirate rejects this claim, saying that security and peace have been ensured in Afghanistan.

“These kinds of claims are baseless and false. In Afghanistan, peace, stability and security are ensured all over the country, and all people feel calm and there are no security problems in Afghanistan at the moment,” said Bilal Karimi, Deputy spokesman of the Islamic Emirate.

Meanwhile, some military analysts have different views in this regard.

“The security situation in Afghanistan is good and not so bad that these countries should warn its citizens not to travel to Afghanistan,” said Asadullah Nadim, a military expert.

“Many nations in the region and around the world sometimes feel content with the security that exists in Afghanistan, and sometimes engage in intelligence propaganda,” said Ahmad Khan Andar, another military analyst.

Previously, the Russian Special Representative for Afghanistan, and the German Foreign Ministry urged their respective citizens to avoid traveling to Afghanistan because of the security situation.

UK’s FCDO Advises Against All Travel to Afghanistan
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Govt Will Not Endure Without People’s Support: Haqqani

On the other hand, the deputy Interior Ministry, Mohammad Nabi Omari, called on the Islamic Emirate’s forces to treat the people with proper behavior.

In a meeting with Kabul province authorities, the acting Interior Minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani, said that bringing Afghanistan into “obedience” does not demonstrate the improvement of physical strength but rather the improvement of “spiritual” strength.

He also said that the interim government will not continue without the support of the people.

During the meeting, Haqqani said that silencing the revolutionary people in the 34 provinces of Afghanistan and making them obey is not something that can be done by force.

“If we really surrender to God, the people will obey the government, if we are bad inside but good outside, God will make us scandalous and we will not endure. If we don’t obey God, we will be beaten,” he said.

“There was fighting against the invasion. It was struggles of the Islamic Emirate’s forces and it was Jihad. Now we are in another level of Jihad, which is stability and steadiness of the Islamic government,” said Mohammad Qassim Khalid, governor of Kabul.

Meanwhile, the head of the Kabul department of intelligence, Mohammad Arif, emphasized the need for implementation of the edicts of the Islamic Emirate leaders’ decrees in a bid to pave the ground for a “sharia government.”

“Every decree which is issued by the leaders, including the decree of Amirul Momineen [Islamic Emirate’s leader], we should consider it with respect and bring it into effect,” he said.

On the other hand, the deputy Interior Ministry, Mohammad Nabi Omari, called on the Islamic Emirate’s forces to treat the people with proper behavior.

“Some of the people have complained that when we go to the governor or commander, we were ignored… my brothers we should pay attention to these points,” he said.

This comes as the citizens across the country have repeatedly complained about the mistreatment of the Islamic Emirate’s forces.

Govt Will Not Endure Without People’s Support: Haqqani
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UN: Climate Change Negatively Impacting Afghanistan

According to environmental experts, repeated droughts, reduced rains and lower groundwater levels are the negative effects of climate change in the country.

The United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA) is concerned about the negative impacts of climate change in Afghanistan.

The UNAMA Climate Change Officer said Afghanistan is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world and needs to work together in this field.

Officials of the Environmental Protection Agency called on the international community to resume suspended projects to mitigate the impacts of climate change in Afghanistan.

The head of UNAMA’s Environmental Protection Division (UNAMA) told TOLOnews on a visit to Kandahar that Afghanistan is now facing a high threat of climate change issues.

Charity Watson said that it needs to work collaboratively to mitigate the negative impacts of climate change in the country.

“We are looking very closely at this issue. Climate change resilience in Afghanistan cannot wait and we are exploring what are the possibilities for opening up the suspended climate financing mechanism, we cannot promise anything but we are looking at this issue closely,” said Charity Watson, head of the Department of Environmental Protection of UNAMA.

Together, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) officials are calling on the international community to restart suspended projects to mitigate the negative impacts of climate change worth more than $800 million in Afghanistan.

“The 32 projects being implemented in Afghanistan were worth nearly $826 million and were in the diversity of life, forests and fighting drought,” said Muhibullah Bahar, representative of the National Environmental Protection Agency.

A number of citizens also called on the acting government to do more to mitigate the negative impacts of climate change in the country.

“We call on the international community and our friendly and neighboring countries, especially the United Nations, to cooperate in this regard,” said Taqi Sadat, Bamyan resident.

“One of the main reasons for this is the lack of water and seedlings that we face,” said Jawid Ahmad, a Kandahar resident.

According to environmental experts, repeated droughts, reduced rains and lower groundwater levels are the negative effects of climate change in the country.

UN: Climate Change Negatively Impacting Afghanistan
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US encourages Afghanistan’s neighbors, including Pakistan, to accept refugees

By  and 

WASHINGTON, Oct 19 (Reuters) – The United States “strongly” encouraged Afghanistan’s neighbors, including Pakistan, to allow entry for Afghans seeking protection and urged them to uphold obligations in treatment of refugees, the U.S. State Department said on Thursday.

THE TAKE

Pakistan has set a Nov. 1 deadline for all illegal immigrants, including hundreds of thousands of Afghans, to leave the country or face forcible expulsion.

BY THE NUMBERS

Some 1.73 million Afghans in Pakistan have no legal documents, according to Islamabad, which alleged that Afghan nationals carried out over a dozen suicide bombings this year.

Pakistan has hosted the largest number of Afghan refugees since the Soviet invasion of Kabul in 1979. Islamabad says the number of Afghan refugees in Pakistan totaled 4.4 million.

Some 20,000 or more Afghans who fled the 2021 Taliban takeover of Afghanistan are in Pakistan awaiting the processing of their applications for U.S. Special Immigration Visas (SIVs) or resettlement in the United States as refugees.

KEY QUOTE

“We strongly encourage Afghanistan’s neighbors, including Pakistan, to allow entry for Afghans seeking international protection and to coordinate with international humanitarian organizations … to provide humanitarian assistance,” a U.S. State Department spokesperson told reporters on Thursday.

CONTEXT

Pakistan says the deportation process would be orderly and conducted in phases and could begin with people with criminal records.

Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers have said Pakistan’s threat to force out Afghan migrants was “unacceptable“.

Relations have deteriorated between Pakistan and Afghanistan over the past couple of years, largely over accusations that Islamists fighting the Pakistani state operate from Afghan territory. The Taliban deny this claim.

A group of former top U.S. officials and resettlement organizations have urged Pakistan to exempt from deportation to Afghanistan thousands of Afghan applicants for special U.S. visas or refugee relocation to the United States.

Reporting by Simon Lewis; writing by Kanishka Singh

US encourages Afghanistan’s neighbors, including Pakistan, to accept refugees
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A rare and puzzling ‘domino effect’ triggered 4 powerful quakes in Afghanistan

National Geographic Society magazine

At 11:11 a.m. local time on October 7, Afghanistan’s Herat province was struck by a magnitude 6.3 temblor. A fault at the far western end of the Hindu Kush mountain range ruptured, damaging the populous Herat city and leaving many rural villages in rubble. Then, just 23 minutes later, there was another earthquake, also registering as magnitude 6.3.

Just four days later, on October 11, while bodies were still being recovered from the wreckage, yet another magnitude 6.3 earthquake hit the same region, further traumatizing a devastated populace. By October 15, the death toll had reached almost 3,000—and that’s when a fourth magnitude 6.3 quake rocked the area.

This back-to-back sequence of four equally strong earthquakes in just over a week stunned many scientists. “I was startled and dismayed to see the initial doublet,” says Judith Hubbard, an earthquake scientist at Cornell University. “The third earthquake was surprising; the fourth even more so.”

Scientists have been vigorously debating what may have generated this unlikely seismic cascade. A dearth of local seismometers makes the events difficult to study, but one idea is already gaining support. The cause of the quakes was “most likely a domino effect,” says Harold Tobin, the director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network at the University of Washington.

When the first quake struck on October 7, some of the stress from the geologic fault that slipped was transferred to another, already stressed fault. That caused it to rupture as well soon after—and this process happened twice more. This sort of transferal of stresses is seen all over the world, but in the case of these earthquakes, “what’s unusual is that they have all been around the same magnitude and occurred in a very short period of time,” says Tobin.

Earthquake sequences like this are scarce, which makes understanding them tricky. And while scientists continue to puzzle over this latest sequence, they warn that it may not yet be complete—additional quakes in the coming days, weeks, or months remain a concerning possibility.

“There is no way to know, at this point, if the latest ‘domino’ will cause another one to fall,” says Hubbard.

An unlikely occurrence 

The network of faults crisscrossing much of Afghanistan is a multi-layered web of possible rupture sites crafted by the inexorable movements of the Arabian, Eurasian, and Indian tectonic plates. Practically, this means that the country hosts plenty of earthquakes, some of them lethal; last summer, a magnitude 6.1 quake on the border with Pakistan killed over 1,000 people.

Normally a pair of strong quakes in Afghanistan wouldn’t seem unusual. But from the start, this pair proved peculiar. “This part of Afghanistan is far less seismically active than the eastern part, so the location of the first two earthquakes was somewhat surprising,” says Wendy Bohon, an earthquake geologist.

But it was the equivalent magnitudes that particularly piqued the interests of scientists. “When the first two very similar magnitude 6.3 earthquakes occurred, I already thought that this was a fairly unusual sequence,” says Jascha Polet, a seismologist and professor emeritus at California State Polytechnic University Pomona. “When the sequence then produced a quadruplet of these events, I was very surprised.”

This is not how earthquakes normally work. Typically you get a mainshock—a relatively large fault rupture—that is followed by many smaller aftershocks that decrease in frequency over time. You can get another quake in the area of a similar magnitude, but the odds of that happening within a week of the mainshock are about 5 percent.

The quake pairing on October 7 defied those odds. It was what is known as a doublet: two distinct quakes of similar or equal magnitudes happening in a short timespan on the same or on closely spaced fault zones. Each have their own aftershock pattern, and due to their proximity, they are thought to be linked by an underlying tectonic or seismic process.

Doublets are not especially uncommon. Coincidentally, there was a doublet in Papua New Guinea the same day. The quakes that struck Turkey and Syria in February were also a doublet. Triplets, although rarer, also happen. “There was a triplet sequence in central Iran that occurred in the space of about two weeks in December 2017,” says Edwin Nissen, an earthquake scientist at the University of Victoria in Canada—three magnitude 6 quakes in succession.

But “a quadruplet, especially one of four that are very close to identical magnitude, is certainly a very rare and unlikely pattern,” says Tobin.

Hubbard notes that there was a quadruplet in the Philippines in 2019, where quakes of magnitude 6.4, 6.6, 6.5, and 6.8 struck Mindanao Island between October and December. But Afghanistan’s equal-magnitude and fast-paced quadruplet appears particularly perplexing.

So what caused it?

A quartet of quakes 

That there were four modestly powerful quakes, rather than one extremely strong temblor, is probably due to the piecemeal nature of the region’s mountainous faults, “broken up by gaps, step-overs, or bends,” says Nissen. “These segment boundaries can stop earthquakes from rupturing over a wide fault plane, which is needed to generate a very large magnitude.”

Seismic signals reveal that all four quakes were caused by thrust faulting, where one crustal wedge jolts over another. But limited data means that the specific fault (or faults) responsible have not yet been identified.

Regardless of this uncertainty, the migration of stress through the crust is likely the root cause of the four quakes. “After an earthquake, some nearby areas are put under more stress, making earthquakes on faults in those areas more likely,” says Bohon.

The epicenters of each successive quake are slightly to the east of one another, possibly involving lots of closely spaced faults, or several sections of one long fault broken up into pieces. “It may be that these are faults that are stacked on top of each other, kind of like blocks, and when one moves it makes the others more likely to move,” says Bohon.

But this explanation alone still doesn’t explain why these earthquakes had the same magnitudes, says Polet.

There is, however, no hard-and-fast rule that says quakes in a doublet, triplet, or quadruplet must be a certain size—that depends on the unique dimensions and behaviors of each fault. That these four quakes were the same magnitude, then, “is probably coincidence,” says Hubbard.

A rigged game of dominos 

Not everyone has bought into this preliminary analysis. “It doesn’t need to be a domino effect,” says Zachary Ross, a geophysicist at the California Institute of Technology. It could instead be what seismologists broadly refer to as a swarm: a series of quakes of comparable sizes all happening around the same time and in the same region, with none being a distinct mainshock.

Ross considers Afghanistan’s seismic sequence to be “fairly normal for earthquake swarms, in which we often see many earthquakes with similar magnitudes.” But he notes that swarms with magnitudes above 6 are uncommon. Another issue is that, when swarms occur, molten rock or superheated fluids moving through the crust is often implicated as the cause—but this part of Afghanistan is not associated with this type of geologic activity.

Most scientists are leaning toward the domino effect hypothesis, and as they gather more data, they will start to get a clearer picture of the underlying geologic cause. But one thing is already crystal clear: This region was entirely unprepared for any one of the quadruplet’s quakes.

The remote villages most severely affected are collections of unreinforced mud, brick, and timber buildings, the sort that immediately fold during a strong earthquake. Tragically, an estimated 90 percent of the victims were women and children, who were more likely to be inside when the quakes struck. The Taliban has restricted the rights of women to move freely in public spaces, exacerbating the disparity of casualties.

A rare and puzzling ‘domino effect’ triggered 4 powerful quakes in Afghanistan
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Intl Criticism of Restrictions on Women Continue

Aydil pledged continued assistance to the victims of the earthquake in Herat.

The Permanent Representative of Türkiye to the United Nations, and the Chargé d’Affaires of the Afghanistan Permanent Mission to the UN, Naseer Ahmad Faiq, criticized the restrictions against women in Afghanistan.

Speaking at the Third Committee, 78th UNGA session, the representative of Türkiye, Turkis Ismail Aydil, said that the fundamental rights of all Afghans, including the right to education, should be fully respected.

“We are deeply concerned by the erosion of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms in Afghanistan, in particular, for women and girls who have been imposed severe restrictions. The fundamental rights of all Afghans including, the right to education should be fully respected,” said Turkey’s representative to the UN.

Aydil pledged continued assistance to the victims of the earthquake in Herat.

“Turkey will continue to stand by the Afghan people to respond to their humanitarian needs and calls for global efforts to toward this end,” he said.

The Chargé d’Affaires of the Afghanistan Permanent Mission to the UN, Naseer Ahmad Faiq, said at the meeting that restrictions on women erased the gains made by Afghan women over the past two decades.

“Of utmost concern is the impact on women’s and girls’ rights and fundamental freedoms. The Taliban regime imposed systematic discrimination and strict gender-based restrictions, denying women and girls access to education, employment, and public life. These actions erased the hard-fought gains made by Afghan women over the past two decades and undermined their ability to realize their full potential and contribute in the economic development. This systemic oppression created a climate of fear, gender persecution and gender apartheid,” Faiq said.

Meanwhile, Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for the Secretary-General, told a press briefing that they continue to support the needy people in Afghanistan with their partners.

“Turning to Afghanistan, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs says that humanitarians are in a race against time to meet the needs of affected communities before winter sets in after the country was hit by three earthquakes.  Night-time temperatures have already begun to dip. In addition to people whose homes have been destroyed, many Afghans — including in Herat City — are sleeping outside out of fear that their homes will collapse with additional aftershocks. We, along with our partners, continue to support the response but much more needs to be done,” Farhan Haq said.

Although the Islamic Emirate does not comment in this regard, it earlier said that women’s rights are upheld in accordance with Islamic Sharia in the country.

Intl Criticism of Restrictions on Women Continue
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Release of Journalist Mortaza Behboudi Sparks Reactions

Organizations supporting the media in the country welcomed the release of Mortaza Behboudi, and said they consider it a positive step by the Islamic Emirate.

The release of Mortaza Behboudi, a Franco-Afghan journalist, by the current government sparked domestic and foreign reactions.

Organizations supporting the media in the country welcomed the release of Mortaza Behboudi, and said they consider it a positive step by the Islamic Emirate.

UN Special Rapporteur Richard Bennett and Amnesty International welcomed the release of Mortaza Behboudi and called for the immediate and unconditional release of human rights defender Rasoul Parsi, Matiullah Wesa, founder of the PenPath campaign and advocate for girls’ education, and the women’s rights activists Neda Parwani and Zholia Parsi.

UN Special Rapporteur Richard Bennett said on X: “Very welcome albeit overdue news that Mortaza Behboudi has been released at last. I hope that now he and his family will enjoy some peaceful time together.”

“The Taliban court order to release Afghan French journalist Mortaza Behboudi is a positive step. He should not have been arbitrarily detained for 9 months in the first place. Amnesty International calls on the Taliban de-facto authorities for immediate and unconditional release of education activist Matiullah Wesa, university lecturer and human rights defender Rasool Parsi, women protestors Neda Parwani and Zholia Parsi and all others who have been arbitrary arrested for criticizing the Taliban policies and speaking up for human rights,” Amnesty International said on X.

UNAMA News wrote on X that “UNAMA welcomes the release of journalist Mortaza Behboudi, detained by Afghanistan’s de facto authorities since January this year. We continue to actively engage and advocate with the de facto authorities for the protection of media and an end to arbitrary detentions.”

According to the statement of Reporters Without Borders (RSF), Behboudi, who is a journalist, was arrested on January 7 in Afghanistan and was released from Pul-e-Charkhi prison in Kabul on October 18.

“The Kabul criminal court’s decision to release journalist Mortaza Behboudi is of course a huge relief for his wife Alexandra, for his friends and colleagues, and for all defenders of press freedom. It is the end of a painful ordeal and of constant worry for more than nine months. I would like to thank the entire support committee, and in particular Solène Chalvon-Fioriti, Rachida El Azzouzi and Antoine Bernard for their coordination. After nine months of daily campaigning for his release, RSF is now working to ensure that Mortaza is reunited with his wife and her family in Paris in the next few days,” Christophe Deloire, Secretary General of RSF said.

“We ask the Islamic Emirate to pay more attention to media activities, because media is the mirror of the government, and it can reveal the dark angles of the government,” said Ahad Tanha, a journalist.

“As a journalist I ask the Islamic Emirate to address the media issues through the Commission on Media Violation (CMV),” said Mohammad Mohammadi, a journalist.

Meanwhile, the Afghanistan National Journalists Union (ANJU) emphasized the need to support journalists, saying that media violations should be solved through legal means.

“Whenever a law is violated by the media society, and a journalist violates a law and does not follow the rules and regulations, it is necessary that when the security agencies arrest the journalist, they should share all the details with the media,” said Masroor Lutfi, a member of ANJU.

However, the Islamic Emirate said that journalists are arrested due to intelligence events.

“Some events are not journalistic events, they have intelligence aspects or there some other accusations. Sometimes journalists have been detained and they have been released later or they have been punished,” said Zabihullah Mujahid, the Islamic Emirate’s spokesman.

Release of Journalist Mortaza Behboudi Sparks Reactions
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