UN concern after its female workers are ‘banned’ from working by Taliban

United Nations staff in Afghanistan have been ordered to stay at home for 48 hours to give UN officials time to persuade the Taliban not to go ahead with their plan to ban all female Afghan employees of the UN from working.

The UN said the ban would lead to even less humanitarian aid reaching Afghanistan.

The warning was issued by the UN secretary general, António Guterres, after UN female staffers were prevented from reporting to work in Nangarhar province on Tuesday. The Taliban subsequently told UN officials orally but not in writing that the ban was going ahead nationwide.

The UN informed all its Afghan employees, men and women, not to report to their workplaces for 48 hours until this issue was clarified in its meetings with the Taliban.

“We remind de facto authorities that United Nations entities cannot operate and deliver life-saving assistance without female staff,” the UN said.

The Taliban have already banned women from working for aid agencies, and NGOs in the country on Tuesday said they feared the Nangarhar province ban was a precursor to a nationwide ban.

Until now Afghan women working for the UN have been excluded from the ban. Many NGOs have tried to negotiate local opt-outs of the ban on women working especially in the health sector where female staff are needed to access Afghan women. Efforts by high-ranking UN officials and diplomats close to the Taliban to get the ban lifted formally have failed.

Zalmay Khalilzad, a former US representative to the talks on the future of Afghanistan prior to the Taliban takeover, said such a step would be a breach of the undertakings the Taliban gave to all sides both in public and private in the talks staged in Doha.

Despite initial promises of a more moderate rule than during its previous stint in power, the Taliban have imposed harsh measures since seizing control in 2021 as US and Nato forces were pulling out of Afghanistan after two decades of war.

Girls are banned from education beyond sixth grade and women are barred from working, studying, travelling without a male companion, and even going to parks. Women must also cover themselves from head to toe.

He also said UN officials were told through “various conduits” including in Jalalabad that the ban applied to the whole country. The UN, he said, had been warned the step was imminent and, asked about contingency plans, said: “The contingency plan is almost too tragic to even contemplate. We are going to continue to engage with the de facto authorities on this.”

He said: “We’re still looking into how this development would affect our operations in the country, and we are expected to have more meetings with the de facto authorities tomorrow in Kabul in which we’re trying to seek some clarity.”

Dujarric said female staff members were essential to executing life-saving UN operations on the ground, saying that out of a population of about 40 million people, the organisation was “trying to reach 23 million men, women and children with humanitarian aid”. The UN has 4,000 staff in Afghanistan of which 3,500 are Afghans. The UN did not immediately have a gender breakdown available.

The Taliban are not recognised by the UN so the leverage it has is largely confined to freezing aid, something the organisation would be very reluctant to do. Since December 2021 the UN has been the conduit for approximately $1.8bn (£1.4bn) in cash being brought into the country in monthly shipments. The funds required due to the banking collapse in Afghanistan are for the UN and partners to conduct their work, but also act as an injection of liquidity that staves off an inflationary spiral.

A report by the Norwegian Refugee Council this week had urged humanitarian donors to be more flexible in providing funds to the country, and to be less concerned by the threat of sanctions.

A Taliban fighter stands guard in Kabul

Afghan aid at risk from Taliban ban on women, warns United Nations
The UN political mission in Afghanistan, Unama, is headed by a woman, Roza Otunbayeva, a former president and foreign minister of Kyrgyzstan. She was appointed by the secretary general in coordination with the UN security council. Dujarric said there had been no Taliban action regarding the UN’s senior leadership.

Taliban restrictions in Afghanistan, especially the bans on education and NGO work, have drawn fierce international condemnation. But the they have shown no signs of backing down, claiming the bans are temporary suspensions in place allegedly because women were not wearing the Islamic headscarf, or hijab, correctly and because gender segregation rules were not being followed.

UN concern after its female workers are ‘banned’ from working by Taliban
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UN says its female staffers banned from working in Afghanistan

Al Jazeera

4 April 2023

The United Nations has reportedly asked all staff not to come to the office for 48 hours.

Stephane Dujarric said this was the latest in a “disturbing trend” undermining the ability of aid organisations to work in Afghanistan where some 23 million people, more than half the country’s population, need help.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres would view any ban on Afghan women working for the United Nations in their country as “unacceptable and, frankly, inconceivable”, he said.

Spokespeople for the Taliban administration and the Afghan information ministry did not immediately reply to requests for comment from the Reuters news agency.

Two UN sources told Reuters that concerns about the enforcement of the ban had prompted the United Nations to ask all staff not to come to the office for 48 hours.

“We’re still looking into how this development would affect our operations in the country and we are expecting to have more meetings with the de facto authorities tomorrow in Kabul. We’re trying to seek some clarity,” Dujarric said. “We do not have anything in writing as of now.”

The United Nations Mission to Afghanistan (UNAMA) earlier on Tuesday expressed concern that female staff in the eastern province of Nangarhar had been stopped from reporting to work.

“National UN staff [male and female] will not come to UN offices for 48 hours due to a threat of enforcement of a ban on female national staff in light of enforcement starting today in Jalalabad,” a senior UN official told Reuters, referring to Nangarhar’s capital.

Friday and Saturday are normally weekend days at the UN offices in Afghanistan, meaning staff would not return until Sunday at the earliest.

The Taliban administration, which seized power as US-led forces withdrew from Afghanistan after 20 years of war, says it respects women’s rights in accordance with its interpretation of Islamic law.

Since toppling the Western-backed government in Kabul, the Taliban have tightened controls over women’s access to public life, including barring women from university and closing most girls’ high schools.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES
UN says its female staffers banned from working in Afghanistan
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28.3 Million People in Afghanistan Need Humanitarian Aid: OCHA

OCHA said that 28.3 million people in Afghanistan need humanitarian aid, of which 23% are women, 54% are children, and 8.3% of them are with severe disabilities.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said that despite Afghanistan being the world’s largest and most severe humanitarian crisis, OCHA’s 2023 appeal has received less than 5% of its requirement to help people in need in Afghanistan.

OCHA said that 28.3 million people in Afghanistan need humanitarian aid, of which 23% are women, 54% are children, and 8.3% of them are with severe disabilities.

“Despite Afghanistan being world’s largest & most severe humanitarian crisis, the 2023 appeal has received less than 5% of its requirement, making it the lowest funded aid operation globally. Without urgent resources, millions of people risk missing out on lifesaving aid, incl. food,” OCHA tweeted.

“Their priorities shift, and a new event occurs every day. Hence, based on this, it is essential for our nation to stand on its own two feet and make the best use of both natural and human resources,” said Azerakhsh Hafizi, an economist.

Meanwhile, David Beasley, Executive Director of the World Food Program (WFP) said in an interview with CNN that due to the lack of money, six million people in Afghanistan are on the brink of famine.

“Right now, because of lack of money for Afghanistan people, this is a nation of 42 million people, of which over 20 million people are in severe food insecurity, but six of them are knocking at famines door,” Beasley said.

According to Abdul Latif Nazari, deputy minister of the Ministry of Economy, many Afghan citizens continue to require humanitarian assistance, and as a result, the Ministry has asked for further assistance from aid organizations.

“We ask the international community and aid agencies to continue their assistance to the people of Afghanistan so that we can implement our plans to reduce poverty,” Nazari noted.

In the meantime, WFP in a statement said that Japan contributes an additional $5 million to WFP in Afghanistan.

The statement said that nearly 20 million Afghans are faced with hunger and six million of them are one step away from famine. WFP added that the organization urgently needs $800 million for the next six months to assist Afghans.

28.3 Million People in Afghanistan Need Humanitarian Aid: OCHA
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Russia to Convene Conference on Afghanistan in April

The Islamic Emirate called for its inclusion in the meeting, saying that representatives of the Islamic Emirate should be invited to the conference.

Russia has announced it will hold a conference on Afghanistan in Uzbekistan on April 13, and representatives of neighboring countries will attend.

TASS reported that the Russian special envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, said that the foreign ministers of the neighboring countries will attend.

According to Kabulov, there is still no progress in creating a five-party G5 format for a settlement in Afghanistan with the participation of Russia, India, Iran, China and Pakistan due to Islamabad’s objections to the involvement of New Delhi.

The Islamic Emirate called for its inclusion in the meeting, saying that representatives of the Islamic Emirate should be invited to the conference.

“For any meeting about Afghanistan, either at the regional or international level, it is necessary that a delegation from the Islamic Emirate, as one of the main sides, (be invited) to share the situation on the ground with the participants,” said Suhail Shaheen, head of the Taliban’s Qatar-based political office.

This comes as political analysts said that such meetings benefit Afghanistan.

“The conference in Uzbekistan is a response to the regional countries, particularly the neighboring countries that are worried about insecurity on its soil,” said Hamid Safoot, a political analyst.

“Until they find a friend or a colleague, such efforts will not bring results. We have seen a lot of such efforts outside of the country but none of them have had positive results,” said Wahid Faqiri, a political analyst.

Russia to Convene Conference on Afghanistan in April
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Taliban carries out deadly raid on ISIL hideout in Afghanistan

Al Jazeera

4 April 2023

A police spokesman says an ISIL hideout in Nahri Shahi district was targeted and six fighters were killed.

The raid comes as the Taliban rulers crack down on the regional affiliate of the ISIL group – known as the Islamic State in Khorasan Province (ISKP), which has carried out several deadly attacks in recent months killing dozens, including Balkh governor Mohammad Dawood Muzammil last month.

According to Mohammad Asif Waziri, a spokesman for the police chief in Balkh, the operation late on Monday night targeted an ISIL hideout in Nahri Shahi district. Six members of the armed group were killed, he added.

Muzammil was known for his resistance to ISIL in the area. The group has emerged as the biggest security threat to the Taliban, which took over Afghanistan in August 2021 after US-led foreign forces withdrew after 20 years of war.

A blast in January killed at least five people and injured dozens at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as employees streamed out of the building at the end of their work day.

The ISIL group has also claimed other recent attacks in Kabul, including a bombing near a checkpoint at the city’s military airport that killed and wounded several people and also an assault on a Kabul hotel in mid-December.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Taliban carries out deadly raid on ISIL hideout in Afghanistan
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Afghanistan Only Country That Bans Girls from Secondary School: HRW

“Without educated girls and women, Afghanistan is facing a dark future,” HRW said. 

Human Rights Watch said on Twitter that Afghanistan is the only country in the world that bans girls from going to secondary school.

“Without educated girls and women, Afghanistan is facing a dark future,” HRW said.

This comes as Sheikh Abdul Sami Ghaznawi, an instructor from Central Jihadi Madrassa in Kabul, said in a video that there is no conflict regarding girls’ education. He says that “Hadiths” have indicated that “modern knowledge is obligatory” and if anyone wants to deny it, they should first refer to “the Quran and Hadith.”

“We will solve the issue (education). We will sit with the scholars and they will make a decision. I am surprised about this dispute,” he said.

The UN Assistant Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) also said that access to education is a human right and that quality education is considered an international priority.

“The barring of girls and women from education is not only damaging the females in Afghan society but will also severely harm the social fundamentals of Afghanistan gradually, which will be difficult to recover from,” said Marriam Arveen, a human rights defender.

“It has been three years that we have not gone to school. A one-year stop was due to Covid-19 and the rest of the time– two years–was due to the Islamic Emirate’s takeover. We hope that as the schools are reopened for boys, the Islamic Emirate will reopen it for girls as well,” said Nargis, a student.

This comes as residents of Kabul called on the interim government to provide educational opportunities for women and to reopen secondary schools for girls.

“If we want to have a brilliant future and a developed country, then it is essential that the schools for our sisters be reopened,” said Ameen, a resident of Kabul.

“Without universities and educational institutions, good governance and enduring stability will be difficult,” said Mohammad Sarwar, a resident of Kabul.

It has been nearly 560 days since female students above grade six have been banned from schools, and their fate has yet to be clarified.

Afghanistan Only Country That Bans Girls from Secondary School: HRW
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Trafficking of Military Equipment Abroad Prevented: MoD

This comes as military veterans said the protection of military equipment is important for the country’s future.

Officials at the Ministry of Defense said that they have prevented the trafficking of military equipment and weapons abroad over the last year. 

A spokesman for the Ministry of Defense, Enayatullah Khwarizmi, said that dozens of people were arrested on charges of trafficking the military equipment and weapons to neighboring countries.

“We have recently received information from the 203 Mansour corps in Paktia, where more than 1,000 weapons were found by intelligence,” he said.

Khwarazmi didn’t provide details about the exact figures but said that they have recently prevented trafficking of military equipment in Paktia province.

“The trafficking of weapons and military equipment from Afghanistan to neighboring countries is first of all damaging the Taliban government because the Taliban cannot provide these weapons and ammunition or purchase it from other countries,” said Asadullah Nadim, a political analyst.

Khwarazmi said that a lot of military equipment, including 60 choppers, have been repaired by the maintenance of the Defense Ministry.

“We have so far repaired more than 60 aircraft with our maintenance and engineers. There have been no foreign engineers or assistance,” he said.

This comes as military veterans said the protection of military equipment is important for the country’s future.

“Regarding reconstruction, the upgrading and serious maintenance of the military equipment is vitally essential because in war the weapons create victory for an officer or a soldier,” said Mohammad Mateen Mohammad Khail, a military veteran.

After the withdrawal of the US troops from Afghanistan, the US Department of Defense in a report to US congress said that $7.12 billion worth of military equipment was in Afghanistan.

Trafficking of Military Equipment Abroad Prevented: MoD
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Three UK citizens held in Taliban custody in Afghanistan

Al Jazeera

2 Apr 2023

Non-profit group says charity medic, traveller and unnamed third man ‘being well-treated’ as UK foreign office seeks contact with them.

In a statement released on Saturday, the foreign office said it was providing support to their families.

The Presidium Network said it is assisting two of the detainees, charity medic Kevin Cornwell, 53, and an unnamed man.

It also confirmed that the third man is Miles Routledge, 23, a British holidaymaker who received widespread attention and criticism on social media in August 2021 for having travelled to Afghanistan despite the Taliban’s return to power after US-led foreign forces withdrew from the country.

“We believe they are in good health and being well treated,” Scott Richards of the Presidium Network told UK-based Sky News. “We have no reason to believe they’ve been subject to any negative treatment such as torture, and we’re told that they are as good as can be expected in such circumstances.”

There had been “no meaningful contact” between authorities and the two men Presidium is assisting, he said, adding that their arrests came in relation to a misunderstanding over what he said was a licensed weapon in Cornwell’s room.

“Anyone travelling to dangerous parts of the world should take the utmost caution,” UK Home Secretary Suella Braverman told Sky News. “If they are going to do that, they should always act on the advice of the foreign office travel advice.” “If there are risks to people’s safety, if they’re a British citizen abroad, then the UK government is going to do whatever it takes to ensure that they’re safe. The government is in negotiations and working hard to ensure people’s safety is upheld.”

Last year, the Taliban freed a veteran television cameraman and four other British nationals whom it had held for six months.

Al Jazeera reached out to Taliban officials for comment but had not gotten a response at the time of publication.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Three UK citizens held in Taliban custody in Afghanistan
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USIP Expert Says Intl Aid to Afghanistan ‘Slipping,’ Changes Needed

According to the ministry’s figures, there are now 360 NGOs operating in the nation, with the majority of them engaged in providing humanitarian help.

William Byrd, a United States Institute of Peace (USIP) expert writing for the LAWFARE blog, said that international aid to Afghanistan is decreasing, and he proposed a number of changes to the world’s approach to helping Afghanistan—including coordinating aid efforts and utilizing the Afghan Trust Fund in Switzerland—to improve the situation. 

Byrd wrote: “International humanitarian aid is critical in responding to natural disasters and other short-term emergencies. But as the U.N. itself recognizes, such aid is not well positioned to respond to—let alone resolve—a prolonged economic crisis such as the one currently occurring in Afghanistan.”

He continued:

“This is particularly true when humanitarian aid is a primary source of external financial support propping up the economy and when the national government—the Taliban regime—is at odds with donors and harms the welfare of its own population, especially women and girls, as evidenced by the Taliban’s bans on female education and women working in nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Given these challenges and the myriad humanitarian needs elsewhere in the world, support for continuing massive aid to Afghanistan is slipping.”

Along with proposing ways to empower the Afghan private sector, Byrd spotlighted a failing of the international community: “there has been too much focus on Taliban behavior and the international community’s unsuccessful efforts to influence the Taliban. Too little attention, meanwhile, has been devoted to aid agencies’ and donor countries’ own aid practices and performance and delivery modalities, which lie within their control.”

Byrd lays out a plan for how humanitarian aid should be gradually lessened on the one hand, but how on the other hand long-term stability for the Afghan economy should be increased. He writes:

“The international community should make much greater use of the Afghan private sector in the delivery of aid, which will reduce associated costs while providing a modest economic boost. There is a widespread consensus that humanitarian aid alone is not the solution to Afghanistan’s economic crisis, but unfortunately there is little prospect for traditional development aid to ramp up.”

In response to Byrd’s comments that the ban on women working in NGOs and the ban on women and girls’ education are contributing to the precarity of continued international aid, the Ministry of Economy said that it has not placed any restrictions on the activities of humanitarian organizations.

According to the ministry’s figures, there are now 360 NGOs operating in the nation, with the majority of them engaged in providing humanitarian help.

“There are 360 NGOs operating in the country right now, most of their activities are in the relief and humanitarian section,” said Abdul Latif Nazari, deputy of the Ministry of Economy.

Some economists said that banning women from working at NGOs will reduce humanitarian aid.

“Banning women’s work in NGOs, especially organizations that provide health care, might have a negative impact on the continuance of these institutions’ activities and the supply of services,” said Shakir Yaqobi, an economist.

“The international community has given its help, including its humanitarian aid, which relies on employment policies of women in Afghanistan,” said Sayed Masoud, an economist.

Byrd in the blog post also said: “The international community should explore ways to use the $3.5 billion of Afghan central bank reserves in the Afghan Fund in Switzerland to strengthen the country’s balance of payments and support the private sector, without directing these funds to the Taliban regime.”

USIP Expert Says Intl Aid to Afghanistan ‘Slipping,’ Changes Needed
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Over 800,000 Afghans Returned From Iran Last Year: MoRR

The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation (MoRR), said that more than 800,000 Afghans returned from Iran over the last year.

400,000 of these immigrants have been forcefully returned to the nation, according to Abdul Mutalib Haqqani, the spokesperson for the ministry.

The ministry added that these immigrants were expelled from Iran due to illegal immigration and a lack of documents.

“In the last year, 820,000 immigrants from Iran returned to the nation, of which 400,000 were forcibly returned and the rest returned voluntarily,” said Mutalib.

Meanwhile, some citizens consider poverty and unemployment as the main cause of illegal immigration and asked the Islamic Emirate to provide employment opportunities for them.

“I’m a university graduate, I don’t have work, and the economic condition is very severe, therefore I have to go,” said Mohammad Zia, a resident of Kabul.

“I ask the Islamic Emirate to provide employment opportunities for youth inside the country, so they can work inside their community,” said Khaliq Dad, another resident of Kabul.

According to certain immigration activists, migrants face several issues along this path, including robbery and hostage-taking.

“To get out of this situation, it is essential that we develop a plan and fundamental solutions for a sort of legal immigration,” said Asifa Stanekzai, an activist for immigrant rights in Iran.

Previously, the Iranian embassy in Afghanistan, said that more than 6 million immigrants from Afghanistan reside in Iran, and about 2 million of them lack proper documentation for residency.

Over 800,000 Afghans Returned From Iran Last Year: MoRR
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