Detention of Afghan Refugees Continues in Pakistan: Consulate

Takhari called on the Pakistani government to stop detentions of registered refugees of Afghanistan.

The consul of the Islamic Emirate in Karachi, Abdul Jabar Takhari, said that hundreds of Afghan refugees have been detained over the last 15 days.

Takhari said that the detentions of the Afghan refugees by the Pakistani police is continuing.

He called on the Pakistani government to stop detentions of registered refugees of Afghanistan.

“The process of detaining Afghans has been continuing by Pakistan’s police. More than 900 Afghan refugees have been so far detained. However, 200 of them were released by the efforts of the consulates,” Takhari said.

The Afghan refugees in Pakistan urged the interim Afghan government to help them.

Ghafar, an Afghan refugee in a Pakistani prison, expressed his frustration and said: “We have a bad situation in Pakistan’s prisons. The Pakistan police have been mistreating us and oppressing us.”

“There is a lot of pressure on us here. It has been a long time since we were in Pakistan’s prisons. We call on the Islamic Emirate to release us from the prisons,” said an Afghan refugee in a Pakistan’s prison.

The Caretaker Federal Government of Pakistan in a letter instructed the authorities in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to not disturb Afghan refugees.

The letter said that “harassing, arresting and detaining” registered Afghan refugees would “adversely” affect Pakistan’s “goodwill earned over the past forty-three years” with Afghanistan.

The accuracy of the letter was confirmed by the Pakistani embassy in Kabul.

Refugees’ rights activists said that the process of detaining refugees should be stopped and that their conditions should be addressed.

“The Afghan refugees in Pakistan are being harassed by Pakistan police and they are taking bribes,” said Sediqullah Kakar, a refugee rights activist in Pakistan.

According to the consulate of the Islamic Emirate in Karachi, more than 100,000 refugees have returned to Afghanistan via Torkham and Spin Boldak ports.

Detention of Afghan Refugees Continues in Pakistan: Consulate
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25 Projects Worth Around 6 Billion Afs Approved

The Islamic Emirate’s Spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, meanwhile said that the projects will be implemented in various provinces.

The National Procurement Commission has approved 25 projects worth around 6 billion Afs.

The deputy Prime minister for Economic Affairs said on X that the projects are under the general directorate of the PM’s office and Ministries of Defense, Higher Education, Public Works, Rural Rehabilitation and Development, and the Bank-e-Millie Afghan and Kabul Municipality.

The Islamic Emirate’s Spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, meanwhile said that the projects will be implemented in various provinces.

“These are various projects in different provinces which will help reduce the rate of unemployment. Our citizens will find work and everyone will be busy with work. And this is also a positive step for reconstruction of the country,” he said.

The economists believe that there should be foreign investment in infrastructure projects in Afghanistan.

“Foreign investment in infrastructure projects can be beneficial. The countries who are facing financial issues should be helped with foreign assistance,” said Mir Shikib Mir, an economist.

“Foreign investment is important to launch work on projects such as CASA-1000, TAPI pipeline plus mining as well as agricultural,” said Seyar Qureshi, an economist.

This comes as the residents of Kabul voiced concern over the high rate of unemployment.

“These projects which are worth six billion Afs are important and a good step, ” said Qudratulah, a resident of Kabul.

“We are very happy about these projects. We hope these projects will be increased so that the Afghan youth will find jobs,” said Rustam, a resident of Kabul.

Earlier, the Ministry of Public Work (MoPW) said that work on 90 projects worth 2 billion Afs have begun in the ongoing solar year.

25 Projects Worth Around 6 Billion Afs Approved
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He spoke no English, had no lawyer. An Afghan man’s case offers a glimpse into US immigration court

BY JULIE WATSON

The Afghan man speaks only Farsi, but he wasn’t worried about representing himself in U.S. immigration court. He believed the details of his asylum claim spoke for themselves.

Mohammad was a university professor, teaching human rights courses in Afghanistan before he fled for the United States. Mohammad is also Hazara, an ethnic minority long persecuted in his country, and he said he was receiving death threats under the Taliban, who reimposed their harsh interpretation of Sunni Islam after taking power in 2021.

He crossed the Texas border in April 2022, surrendered to Border Patrol agents and was detained. A year later, a hearing was held via video conference. His words were translated by a court interpreter in another location, and he said he struggled to express himself — including fear for his life since he was injured in a 2016 suicide bombing.

At the conclusion of the nearly three-hour hearing, the judge denied him asylum. Mohammad said he was later shocked to learn that he had waived his right to appeal the decision.

“I feel alone and that the law wasn’t applied,” said Mohammad, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition that only his first name be used, over fears for the safety of his wife and children, who are still in Afghanistan.

Mohammad’s case offers a rare look inside an opaque and overwhelmed immigration court system where hearings are often closed, transcripts are not available to the public and judges are under pressure to move quickly with ample discretion. Amid a major influx of migrants at the border with Mexico, the courts — with a backlog of 2 million cases -– may be the most overwhelmed and least understood link in the system.

AP reviewed a hearing transcript provided by Mona Iman, an attorney with Human Rights First now representing Mohammad. Iman also translated Mohammad’s comments to AP in a phone interview from Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas.

The case reflects an asylum seeker who was ill-equipped to represent himself and clearly didn’t understand what was happening, according to experts who reviewed the transcript. But at least one former judge disagreed and said the ruling was fair.

Now Mohammad’s attorney has won him a new hearing, before a different judge — a rare second chance for asylum cases. Also giving Iman hope is a decision this week by the Biden administration to give temporary legal status to Afghan migrants living in the country for more than a year. Iman believes he qualifies and said he will apply.

But Mohammed has been in detention for about 18 months, and he fears he could remain in custody and still be considered for deportation.

AP sought details and comment from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The agency didn’t address questions on Mohammad’s case but said noncitizens can pursue all due process and appeals and, once that’s exhausted, judges’ orders must be carried out.

For his April 27 hearing, Mohammad submitted photos of his injuries from the 2016 suicide bombing that killed hundreds at a peaceful demonstration of mostly Hazaras. He also gave the court threatening letters from the Taliban and medical documents from treatment for head wounds in 2021. He said militants beat him with sticks as he left the university and shot at him but missed.

In court, the government argued that Mohammad encouraged migration to the U.S. on social media, changed dates and details related to his history, and had relatives in Europe, South America and other places where he could have settled.

In ruling, Judge Allan John-Baptiste said the threats didn’t indicate Mohammad would still be at risk, and that his wife and children hadn’t been harmed since he left.

Mohammad tried to keep arguing his case, but the judge told him the evidentiary period was closed. He asked Mohammad whether he planned to appeal or would waive his right to do so.

Mohammad kept describing his claim, but John-Baptiste reminded him he’d already ruled. Mohammad said if the judge was going to ignore the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan, he wouldn’t ask for an appeal. John-Baptiste indicated he had considered it.

“You were not hit by the gunshot or the suicide bomber,” John-Baptiste said. “The harm that you received does not rise to the level of persecution.”

Mohammad continued, explaining how his family lives in hiding, his wife concealing her identity with a burqa.

“OK, are you going to appeal my decision or not?” John-Baptiste ultimately asked.

“No, I don’t,” Mohammad said.

“And we don’t want you to make the decision now that you can’t come back later and say you want to appeal. This is final, OK, sir?” John-Baptiste said.

He later asked whether he could try to come back legally. The judge started to explain voluntary departure, which would allow him to return in less than a decade, but corrected himself and said Mohammad didn’t qualify.

“I’m sorry about that, but, you know, I’m just going to have to order you removed,” John-Baptiste said. “I wish you the best of luck.”

Mohammad later told AP he couldn’t comprehend what was happening in court. He’d heard from others in detention that he had a month to appeal.

“I didn’t understand in that moment that the right would be taken from me if I said no,” he said.

___

Former immigration judge Jeffrey Chase, who reviewed the transcript, said he was surprised John-Baptiste waived Mohammad’s right to appeal and that the Board of Immigration Appeals upheld that decision. Case law supports granting protection for people who belong to a group long persecuted in their homelands even if an individual cannot prove specific threats, said Chase, an adviser to the appeals board.

But Andrew Arthur, another former immigration judge, said John-Baptiste ruled properly.

“The respondent knew what he was filing, understood all of the questions that were asked of him at the hearing, understood the decision, and freely waived his right to appeal,” Arthur, a fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates for immigration restrictions, said via email.

Chase said the hearing appeared rushed, and he believes the case backlog played a role.

“Immigration judges hear death-penalty cases in traffic-court conditions,” said Chase, quoting a colleague. “This is a perfect example.”

Overall, the 600 immigration judges nationwide denied 63% of asylum cases last year, according to Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. Individual rates vary wildly, from a Houston judge who denied all 105 asylum requests to a San Francisco one denying only 1% of 108 cases.

John-Baptiste, a career prosecutor appointed during the Trump administration’s final months, denied 72% of his 114 cases.

Before Mohammad decided to flee, his wife applied for a special immigrant visa, which grants permanent residency to Afghans who worked for the U.S. government or military, along with their families.

But that and other legal pathways can take years. While they waited, Mohammad said, the Taliban came looking for him but instead detained and beat his nephew. Mohammad described making the devastating decision to leave his family, who had no passports.

He opted for a treacherous route through multiple countries to cross the U.S.-Mexico border, which has seen the number of Afghans jump from 300 to 5,000 in a year.

Mohammad said he crossed into Pakistan, flew to Brazil and headed north. He slept on buses and trekked through Panama’s notorious Darien Gap jungle, where he said he saw bodies of migrants who didn’t make it.

Mohammad planned to live with a niece in North Carolina. Now he fears if he’s sent home and his wife gets her visa, they’ll be separated again.

Deportations to Afghanistan are extremely rare, with a handful each year.

Attorney Iman said they’re grateful Mohammad’s case has been reopened, with a hearing scheduled for Oct. 4. She is fighting for his immediate release.

“I have no doubt that his case would have turned out differently had he been represented,” Iman said. “This is exactly the type of vulnerable individual that the U.S. government has promised, has committed to protect, since it withdrew from the country.”

Associated Press reporter Elliot Spagat contributed from San Diego.

 

He spoke no English, had no lawyer. An Afghan man’s case offers a glimpse into US immigration court
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Afghans who recently arrived in US get temporary legal status from Biden administration

BY REBECCA SANTANA
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration said Thursday it was giving temporary legal status to Afghan migrants who have already been living in the country for a little over a year.

The Department of Homeland Security said in the announcement that the decision to give Temporary Protected Status to Afghans who arrived after March 15, 2022, and before Sept. 20, 2023, would affect roughly 14,600 Afghans.

This status doesn’t give affected Afghans a long-term right to stay in the country or a path to citizenship. It’s good until 2025, when it would have to be renewed again. But it does protect them from deportation and give them the ability to work in the country.

A relatively small number of people are affected. On Wednesday the administration announced it was giving Temporary Protected Status to nearly 500,000 Venezuelans in the country.

But many Afghans who would benefit from the new protections took enormous risks in getting to the U.S., often after exhausting all other options to flee the Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. Supporters have argued that they are deserving of protection.

“Today’s decision is a clear recognition of the ongoing country conditions in Afghanistan, which have continued to deteriorate under Taliban rule,” Eskinder Negash, who heads the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, said in a statement.

Separately, the Department also continued the protected status for a smaller group of Afghans — about 3,100 people. That group already had protection but the administration must regularly renew it.

The news Thursday would not affect tens of thousands of other Afghans who came to the country during the August 2021 American airlift out of Kabul or Afghans who have come over the years on special immigrant visas intended for people who worked closely with the U.S. military or government.

 

Afghans who recently arrived in US get temporary legal status from Biden administration
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UN Survey: Women’s Rights Crucial for Taliban Recognition

80% of women in Afghanistan reported a drop in their ability to undertake income-generating activities under the Taliban.
Hundreds of women in Afghanistan say the United Nations should not recognize the Taliban government until women’s access to work and education is restored, according to a new survey.

About 46% of the 592 Afghan women who spoke to U.N. surveyors in July said the world body should not recognize the Taliban as the government of Afghanistan “under any circumstances.”

Half of the survey respondents said that any recognition of the Taliban government should hinge on tangible improvements in women’s rights, including their rights to education and work.

Since seizing power in 2021, the Taliban have shuttered secondary schools and universities for girls, leaving countless young women without access to education, and have enforced sweeping restrictions on women’s employment.

The Islamist regime has also imposed myriad other restrictions on women’s social rights such as access to sports and entertainment sites prompting the U.N. and human rights organizations to call Afghanistan a country under “gender-apartheid.”

“They [survey responders] expressed concern that recognition would only encourage the de facto authorities to continue becoming stricter in their policies and practices against women and girls,” the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said in a report on Tuesday.

The Taliban’s appeals for international recognition have met with resounding calls for change. Many countries have demanded that the regime abandon its misogynistic policies, form an inclusive government, and respect human rights.

However, Taliban officials contend that their “Islamic Emirate” is inclusive and respects human rights, albeit within the framework of Islamic Sharia law.

“Steps toward normalization, I think, are not going to be possible. And I think there will remain remarkable unity among the international community until and unless we see a significant change in their [Taliban] treatment of the population,” Thomas West, United States’ Special Representative for Afghanistan, said last week.

“We will not give up until Afghan girls’ rights to education and women’s rights to work are restored,” Toor Pekai, the mother of Nobel Peace laureate Malala Yousafzai, told VOA Afghanistan service in an online interview on Monday.

The U.N. survey has also revealed remarkable setbacks in women’s health, income and social influence under the Taliban rule.

“Women consulted frequently describe their lives as that of prisoners living in darkness, confined to the home without hope of a future,” states the UNAMA’s report.

Most of the women surveyed, 80%, reported a drop in their ability to undertake income-generating activities.

In July, the Taliban banned women’s beauty salons in Afghanistan, depriving some 4,000 women of income.

This loss of income has had a profound impact on women’s social and familial roles, diminishing their influence in household decision-making.

“Sixty-nine percent reported that feelings of anxiety, isolation and depression had grown significantly,” the U.N. report says.

The plight of Afghan women is further exacerbated by a deepening humanitarian crisis in the country and a sharp reduction in humanitarian funding.

A U.N. appeal for $3.227 billion for 2023 has received less than 28% of the required funding as of September 19. This shortfall has forced aid agencies to cut essential food aid and health care services, affecting millions of vulnerable Afghans, including women and children.

UN Survey: Women’s Rights Crucial for Taliban Recognition
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US Business Delegation Makes Rare Visit to Taliban-Run Afghanistan


President of the U.S. Afghan American Chamber of Commerce Jeffrey Grieco, third from left, and Taliban Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs Abdul Ghani Baradar, center, co-host a business meeting in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sept. 6, 2023. (Taliban Economic Commission via VOA)
President of the U.S. Afghan American Chamber of Commerce Jeffrey Grieco, third from left, and Taliban Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs Abdul Ghani Baradar, center, co-host a business meeting in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sept. 6, 2023. (Taliban Economic Commission via VOA)
An American private sector delegation opened meetings in Afghanistan with officials and local counterparts Wednesday in the first interaction since the Taliban seized power from a U.S.-backed government two years ago.

Jeffrey Grieco, president of the Afghan American Chamber of Commerce, or AACC, in the United States, is leading the delegation.

Addressing a televised meeting in Kabul of business representatives that Greico co-hosted with Taliban Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs Abdul Ghani Baradar, he said the U.S. government backs the visit.

A spokesperson from the U.S. State Department acknowledged that a delegation from the American Chamber of Commerce in Afghanistan and “individuals with business interests” had traveled to Kabul.

“The United States stands with the people of Afghanistan as they work to rebuild their economy,” the spokesperson told VOA in an emailed statement.

American businessman Grieco credited de facto Afghan authorities for establishing peace in the country, saying they have also “greatly eliminated” corruption. “It’s not all gone, but it’s mostly gone.”

He said his team is seeking to elevate private sector activities and explore ways to ease hardships facing Afghans over the past two years.

“The next year is going to be equally hard as the donors are reducing funding for Afghanistan, both humanitarian food security and other funding, at a key moment when Afghanistan needs funding for humanitarian purposes,” he said.

On Tuesday, the U.N. World Food Program announced that a “massive funding shortfall” had forced it to cut rations for 10 million people in the country this year, warning that time is running out to avert catastrophe in Afghanistan.

“The private sector can be a powerful agent of change and an agent of support when a country like Afghanistan is suffering,” Grieco said at the event, where local women business leaders were also in attendance.

“We think that business is the way to increase knowledge and increase more program activities for the core in Afghanistan, and you are great examples for us,” he told the Afghan female participants.

Barader said in his keynote speech that his government had established nationwide “comprehensive security” and “straightforward investment regulations” to attract domestic and foreign investments in Afghanistan.

The Taliban deputy prime minister cited several mining contracts signed in Kabul last month with Asian and European investors, including some from China, Turkey, Iran and Britain, worth almost $6.5 billion.

Grieco pledged to work closely with Bradar’s office to promote business-to-business ties, stressing the need for the Taliban to ensure security and protection of investment assets.

“What we saw and heard this week is that the Emirate government is ready for a market-based economic system for Afghanistan,” Grieco said, using the official title of the Taliban administration, the “Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.”

“The last [Afghan] government didn’t even understand what a market-based economic system is,” he said.

The president of the U.S.-based AACC said his team has been working in Washington with banking sector representatives to help facilitate the return of Afghanistan’s frozen foreign exchange reserves of about $9 billion.

Grieco explained to the audience that the funds are in the U.S. central bank and European countries. He noted that the money cannot be returned to Afghanistan’s central bank for the time being due to economic sanctions on the Taliban.

“We need the Afghan Bankers’ Association to work tougher now to figure out how to approach the return of the commercial bank assets because there has been a change in our government’s thinking in the last few months,” Grieco said. “They are now willing to consider the return of those assets.”

While speaking to the Kabul gathering, Arthur Groom, a longtime international gemstone investor in Afghanistan, said that while some U.S. investors left the country after the Taliban takeover, his company stayed.

“We need to change some minds … because all I have heard here in many meetings is that it’s not safe here, women are not happy here, and the kids aren’t going to the schools, it’s dirty here. It’s completely opposite from what I saw,” Groom said.

Groom said his investment in Afghanistan aims to bring technology into the country to modernize the mining sector and teach modern technology in gem-cutting to enable locals, including the government, to benefit from their natural resources.

The Taliban reclaimed power in August 2021 as the U.S.-led NATO troops withdrew from the country after almost 20 years of war with the then-Taliban insurgents.

The new fundamentalist authorities have since imposed their strict interpretation of Islamic law, known as Sharia, banning girls from schools beyond the sixth grade, barring many women from workplaces, including those working for aid agencies, and prohibiting their entry into public parks, gyms and bathhouses.

The restrictions have deterred the international community from recognizing the Taliban government. However, Afghanistan’s neighbors and many regional countries have retained or reopened their embassies in Kabul following the power shift two years ago.

The Taliban said they had established peace in Afghanistan and almost eliminated illicit narcotics production to address international concerns, arguing that their policies align with Afghan culture and Islam.

“The rest is our internal matter, and no one should interfere in it like we don’t interfere in other countries’ affairs,” Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said last week in a speech in Kabul in response to criticism of their treatment of Afghan women and other alleged human rights abuses.

The U.S. State Department spokesperson said in remarks to VOA that it continues to advise U.S. citizens against traveling to Afghanistan because of civil unrest, armed conflict, crime, terrorism and kidnapping. “The Department of State assesses that the risk of kidnapping or violence against U.S. citizens in Afghanistan is high,” the spokesperson said.

US Business Delegation Makes Rare Visit to Taliban-Run Afghanistan
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Afghanistan Discussed at UN General Assembly

Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev also said in the discussion that leaving Afghanistan alone would be a grave mistake.

The leaders of Qatar, Iran, Uzbekistan and Turkey discussed Afghanistan among other issues at the 78th session General Debate of the United Nations General Assembly.

In this discussion, Turkey and Iran emphasized the necessity of forming an inclusive government in Afghanistan.

“Regardless of political motives the transport transformation of the interim government into an inclusive administration in which all segments of society are fairly represented will pave the way for Afghanistan and will be positively received in the international arena,” Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, president of Turkey, said.

“In Afghanistan, Iran insists on an inclusive government with the participation of Afghan groups and population, but the assistance of the world is needed in order to address the crisis of refugees who have been driven from their land from Afghanistan, a great many of whom are given refuge in Islamic Iran today,” Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi said.

Although US President Joe Biden did not say anything about Afghanistan, Qatar and Uzbekistan underlined their concerns about the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan and demanded that humanitarian help to the Afghan people continue.

Speaking at the general debate of the 78th Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Amir of the State of Qatar, asked the current Afghan government to stick to its commitments in the Doha Agreement.

“Regarding the situation in Afghanistan, we continue to coordinate international efforts and facilitate dialogue with the UN and the countries concerned, in addition to the caretaker government of Afghanistan, to ensure compliance with the Doha agreement to avoid the recurrence of past mistakes and to prevent Afghanistan from spiraling into a difficult-to-manage humanitarian crisis or becoming a safe haven for terrorist individuals and groups. We also have to work to ensure that the Afghan people receive the needed international support and assistance and enjoy human rights, particularly minority rights and women’s rights to education and work,” Sheikh Tamim noted.

Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev also said in the discussion that leaving Afghanistan alone would be a grave mistake.

“Leaving Afghanistan again alone with its own problems would be a grave mistake. Ignoring, isolating, and imposing sanctions only exacerbates the hardships faced by the ordinary Afghan people. We believe that humanitarian aid to the Afghan people should not be reduced,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, Open Society Foundations as well as ministers of various countries in a statement reiterated their “strong concerns” over the Afghan women situation in Afghanistan and urged the Islamic Emirate to lift these restrictions immediately and to safeguard humanitarian principles.

The joint statement of Albania, Belgium, Cabo Verde, Costa Rica, Croatia, Denmark, France, Germany, Guatemala, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, and Spain stated that “since (the Islamic Emirate) returned to power in August 2021, women and girls have been slowly but surely erased from public life through a series of edicts targeting them.”

According to the statement, “an inclusive and representative political process with the full participation of all Afghans, including women and girls, and persons belonging to ethnic and religious groups and minorities, is required to ensure sustainable peace, stability, and prosperity in Afghanistan.”

Jalil Abbas Jilani, foreign minister of the caretaker government of Pakistan, while delivering his remarks at an Asia Society event said that engaging the Afghan interim government is much more likely to deliver results.

“We also share the international community’s concerns over human rights situation in Afghanistan, especially issues related to women’s rights, girls’ education and women’s employment. We will continue to raise these issues with the Afghan interim administration. We believe that instead of coercive measures, engaging the Afghan interim government is much more likely to deliver results,” Jilani noted.

However, the Islamic Emirate has not commented on the remarks of the leaders of these countries, but it denies the violation of women’s rights in Afghanistan.

“The rights of the people of Afghanistan have been ensured in accordance with the Islamic law and the national interest of the country. The internal issues of Afghanistan are related to the people of Afghanistan. But in meetings which are held abroad regarding Afghanistan the representative of the Afghans should talk about their issues,” said Bilal Karimi, Deputy Spokesman of the Islamic Emirate.

More than 140 leaders attended the opening of the 78th session General Debate of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday at the UN headquarters in New York.

The Islamic Emirate requested that the Debate’s organizers take steps to ease sanctions on the Islamic Emirate before the holding of the debate.

Afghanistan Discussed at UN General Assembly
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Women’s Market Opens in Kabul

Meanwhile, some women who have come to this market to buy things asked the Islamic Emirate to provide work opportunities for women in the country.

A company established an exclusive women’s market in Kabul, providing more than a hundred female businesswomen an opportunity to find employment.

According to the person who established this market, the goal of creating this market is to provide women who have been out of work for the last two years with greater employment opportunities and facilities.

“The main purpose of creating this market is to provide convenience for all the women who live inside Afghanistan in the current situation,” said Rajmana Khaliqi, the founder of the market.

The sole breadwinner of her family, Olya Ahmadyar, a shopkeeper at the market, said that she has been in business for more than 18 years and that she can confidently sell her products at this shop.

“We are pleased that this location has been established because there was previously nowhere for our items to be sold. We are getting orders and have sales,” Ahmadyar said.

Businesswomen at the market expressed their gratitude for the establishment of this secure space for women and asked the Islamic Emirate to support businesswomen.

“It is really good, especially for women, since here the ones who provide are also women, and the ones who buy are also women, which means that women serve women,” Shukria Ahmadyar, a businesswoman said.

“I ask the Islamic Emirate to support us in selling our products,” said Feroza, a businesswoman.

Meanwhile, some women who have come to this market to buy things asked the Islamic Emirate to provide work opportunities for women in the country.

“We ask the Islamic Emirate to let women work, so that they stand on their own feet. Because there are women who do not have men in their family to work for them, that’s why they have to work,” said Mina, the head of the restaurant.

According to officials, this market has a restaurant, a lawn, and more than 30 shops managed by women. Every day, women go here to make purchases.

This market covers an area of around 20 acres and was constructed at the personal expense of 50 million afghani.

Women’s Market Opens in Kabul
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UN urges Afghanistan’s Taliban government to stop torture and protect the rights of detainees

BY RAHIM FAIEZ
Associated Press

ISLAMABAD (AP) — The United Nations said Wednesday it has documented more than 1,600 cases of human rights violations committed by authorities in Afghanistan during arrests and detentions of people, and urged the Taliban government to stop torture and protect the rights of detainees.

Nearly 50% of the violations consisted of “torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment,” the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said.

The report by the mission’s Human Rights Service covered 19 months — from January 2022 until the end of July 2023 — with cases documented across 29 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. It said 11% of the cases involved women.

It said the torture aimed at extracting confessions and other information included beatings, suffocation, suspension from the ceiling and electric shocks. Cases that were not considered sufficiently credible and reliable were not included in the report, it said.

The Taliban have promised a more moderate rule than during their previous period in power in the 1990s. But they have imposed harsh measures since seizing Afghanistan in mid-August 2021 as U.S. and NATO forces were pulling out from the country after two decades of war.

“The personal accounts of beatings, electric shocks, water torture, and numerous other forms of cruel and degrading treatment, along with threats made against individuals and their families, are harrowing,” U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said in a statement issued with the report.

“This report suggests that torture is also used as a tool — in lieu of effective investigations. I urge all concerned de facto authorities to put in place concrete measures to halt these abuses and hold perpetrators accountable,” he said.

The U.N. mission, or UNAMA, uses the term “de facto authorities” for the Taliban government.

Its report acknowledges some steps taken by government agencies to monitor places of detention and investigate allegations of abuse.

“Although there have been some encouraging signs in terms of leadership directives as well as an openness among many de facto officials to engage constructively with UNAMA, and allow visits to prisons, these documented cases highlight the need for urgent, accelerated action by all,” Roza Otunbayeva, the U.N. secretary-general’s special representative for Afghanistan and head of the mission, said in a statement.

The report said of the torture and other degrading treatment that 259 instances involved physical suffering and 207 involved mental suffering.

UNAMA said it believes that ill-treatment of individuals in custody is widely underreported and that the figures in the report represent only a snapshot of violations of people in detention across Afghanistan.

It said a pervasive climate of surveillance, harassment and intimidation, threats to people not to speak about their experiences in detention, and the need for prisoners to provide guarantees by family members and other third parties to be released from custody hamper the willingness of many people to speak freely to the U.N. mission.

The report said 44% of the interviewees were civilians with no particular affiliation, 21% were former government or security personnel, 16% were members of civic organizations or human rights groups, 9% were members of armed groups and 8% were journalists and media workers. The remainder were “family members of persons of interest.”

In a response that was included in the report, the Taliban-led Foreign Ministry said government agencies have taken steps to improve the human rights situation of detainees, and that Islamic law, or Shariah, prohibits torture. It also questioned some of the report’s data. The Ministry of Interior said it has identified only 21 cases of human rights violations.

 

UN urges Afghanistan’s Taliban government to stop torture and protect the rights of detainees
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Afghan health professionals – thousands of female among them – are defying daily challenges to provide critical care.

ISLAMABAD (AP) — The mental health of Afghan women, who have suffered under harsh measures imposed by the Taliban since taking power two years ago, has deteriorated across the country, according to a joint report from three U.N. agencies released Tuesday.

Nearly 70% reported that feelings of anxiety, isolation and depression had grown significantly worse between April and June, an increase from 57% in the preceding quarter, according to the report from U.N Women, the International Organization for Migration and the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan.

Afghan women were interviewed online, in-person and in group consultations as well as via individual telesurveys. In total, 592 Afghan women across 22 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces took part.

The women spoke of suffering from psychological problems including depression, insomnia, loss of hope and motivation, anxiety, fear, aggression, isolation and increasingly isolationist behavior, and thoughts of suicide.

The Taliban, upon taking power in 2021 as U.S. and NATO forces were pulling out of the country following two decades of war, promised a more moderate rule than during their previous period in power in the 1990s. But they have instead imposed harsh measures, many of them targeting women.

They have barred women from most areas of public life and work and banned girls from going to school beyond the sixth grade. They have prohibited Afghan women from working at local and non-governmental organizations. The ban was extended to employees of the United Nations in April.

Opportunities to study continued to shrink as community-based education by international organizations was banned and home-based schooling initiatives were regularly shut down by the de facto authorities — a term use by the U.N. for the Taliban government.

Afghanistan is the only country in the world with restrictions on female education and the rights of Afghan women and children are on the agenda of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Taliban spokesmen were not immediately available to comment on the report Tuesday, but in the past Taliban officials have cited Shariah, or Islamic, law to support their policies regarding women and girls.

Last month, Mohammad Sadiq Akif, the spokesman for the Taliban’s Ministry of Vice and Virtue, said that women lose value if men can see their uncovered faces in public.

The report found that 81% of women had not engaged at all with local Taliban authorities on issues important to them between April and June 2023. This finding was consistent with engagement levels in the previous quarter, said the report.

Forty-six percent of women said international recognition of the Taliban government should not happen under any circumstances, while 50% warned that recognition should only occur under specific conditions contingent on improving women’s rights. These include restoring education and employment and forming an inclusive government.

The women expressed concern that recognition would only encourage the Taliban government to continue becoming stricter in their policies and practices against women and girls.

Afghan women specifically urged the international community to continue political and economic sanctions against the Taliban, including by not granting exemptions to a travel ban. They urged an increase in engagement with the Taliban on gender equality and women’s rights, including by engaging community and religious leaders in awareness and advocacy efforts.

The women said they want support for initiatives that provide counseling and psychological services and they want access to international scholarships and safe migration options for women and girls to study and work overseas.

Afghan health professionals – thousands of female among them – are defying daily challenges to provide critical care.
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