US–Kabul Talks on US Detainees Stall Amid Guantanamo Dispute, NYT Reports

Secret talks between the United States and Kabul over freeing American detainees have stalled after disputes over releasing a Guantanamo prisoner, the New York Times reported.

Negotiations between US officials and the Taliban have reached an impasse after months of quiet discussions aimed at securing the release of American detainees held in Afghanistan.

According to the New York Times, the Taliban demanded the release of Mohammad Rahim, an Afghan national held at Guantanamo Bay, as part of any future deal involving American prisoners.

Three people familiar with the talks told the newspaper that discussions were conducted discreetly over several months, reflecting cautious engagement despite the absence of formal diplomatic ties.

Rahim has been held at Guantanamo since 2008 and is accused of working with al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden as a courier and translator, allegations he has never faced trial for.

The Taliban publicly raised this demand for the first time, prompting Washington to accuse the group of “hostage diplomacy” and warn against linking detainee releases to broader political concessions.

The United States has repeatedly asked the Taliban to clarify the fate of Mahmood Shah Habibi, an Afghan-American former civil aviation chief, whose detention the Taliban denies.

US officials have offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to Habibi’s safe return, while the FBI says he was detained in 2022, a claim rejected by the Taliban.

The Taliban acknowledge holding two Americans, university professor George Glezmann and former serviceman Paul Overby, while denying custody of others mentioned by US authorities.

The US State Department has said Mohammad Rahim will not be included in any future prisoner exchange, despite Taliban requests and ongoing indirect contacts.

Although Washington does not recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s legitimate government, US envoys have traveled to Kabul repeatedly, securing the release of several Americans through mediation.

The talks underscore the fragile balance between humanitarian negotiations and political red lines, as both sides remain locked in mistrust despite limited engagement.

US–Kabul Talks on US Detainees Stall Amid Guantanamo Dispute, NYT Reports
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Over 90% of 10-Year-Olds in Afghanistan Cannot Read, UNICEF Warns

UNICEF warns that more than 90 percent of 10-year-old children in Afghanistan cannot read a simple text, highlighting a deep educational crisis.

UNICEF said on Tuesday, January 27, that Afghanistan’s education system is at a critical point, with widespread illiteracy undermining basic learning for children.

The agency stated, “More than 90 percent of 10-year-olds cannot read a simple text, reflecting a crisis of schooling without learning.”

Since the Taliban regained power, Afghanistan’s education system has faced severe disruption, including school closures, lack of qualified teachers, and curriculum limitations.

UNICEF and UNESCO report that approximately 2.2 million adolescent girls have been denied access to school, worsening gender disparities and deepening the literacy gap.

UNICEF emphasized that continuous investment in early education, literacy, and numeracy is essential to ensure every child can succeed and escape generational illiteracy.

The organization warned that without urgent reforms, the crisis will continue, jeopardizing Afghanistan’s future workforce and social development.

Experts stress that international support, policy changes, and inclusive education for both boys and girls are critical to reversing the educational collapse in Afghanistan.

Over 90% of 10-Year-Olds in Afghanistan Cannot Read, UNICEF Warns
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Taliban bring varna system in Afghanistan, make mullahs untouchable

Sushim Mukul

India Today.

27 Jan 2026

Afghanistan’s Taliban’s newly issued Criminal Procedure Code has triggered alarm among rights groups about dividing Afghan society into rigid classes, where religious elites (mullahs) will enjoy near-immunity from punishment for crimes. Critics say the Taliban have revived slavery-like legal categories and given legal sanctity to violence.

The Taliban enforced an exceptionally harsh interpretation of Sharia law in Afghanistan during their first spell in power, 20 years ago. (Images: File)
The Taliban enforced an exceptionally harsh interpretation of Sharia law in Afghanistan during their first spell in power, 20 years ago. (Images: File)

The Taliban-administered Afghanistan’s new “Criminal Procedure Code for Courts”, a document intended to guide judicial processes, has sparked outrage among human rights bodies, officials of the older regime, and international observers, over its contents. The Taliban Code, which divides citizens into four unequal classes, legitimises slavery (referred to as “ghulami” or “ghulam“) through explicit references to slaves as a legal category, say human rights groups. It also makes mullahs or clerics immune to trials for crime.

The new Taliban Code’s Article 9, divides Afghan society into four classes, where the top spot is occupied by religious scholars. If the mullahs (religious scholars) commit any crime, they would merely be advised, while those at the bottom would suffer both incarceration and corporal punishment, according to Rawadari, the human rights body founded by activists, many of whom were forced into exile following the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021.

Punishments for the same offence in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan will now vary based on the offender’s class.

What is striking is that the code bans only specific forms of physical violence that result in “bone fractures” or the “tearing of the skin”, reported the Afghan International, a London-based Afghani news outlet. It added, a “father might punish his 10-year-old son for actions such as neglecting prayers”.

The media cell of the National Resistance Front (NRF) said that the “Taliban regime legalises slavery, court will give a verdict based on the social status of the accused.” On X, the anti-Taliban body, led by Ahmad Massoud, added, “The upper class will be protected, and poor class will be punished, same like Brahmin and Shudder system in India”.

The Taliban is infamous for its long-standing Islamic jurisprudence and inhuman violent policies used as a tool of control. Such spectacles were common during the Taliban’s first regime and have resurfaced after 2021. They are now backed by courts and decrees sanctioned by supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada. What has changed is the formalisation, where human rights violations are increasingly embedded into law and judicial process.

Earlier this month, Akhundzada signed and distributed a new “Criminal Procedure Code for Courts,” a 119-article document meant to guide judicial processes in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.

These provisions contradict principles of equality, human dignity, and international prohibitions on slavery, and are “far worse than the Middle Ages”, said The Supreme Council of National Resistance for the Salvation of Afghanistan, a coalition of political leaders and factions opposed to Taliban rule.

It is a document proclaiming the conviction of all citizens,” Mohammad Farid Hamidi, the former Attorney General of Afghanistan, wrote on X. He said that branding people as inferior is a clear insult, a direct assault on human dignity, and a grave violation of human worth.

The new code comes around a month after a 13-year-old boy in public executed a man convicted of murdering 13 members of his family in Afghanistan’s eastern province of Khost. Around 80,000 people watched the execution, which was ordered by the Afghan Supreme Court and sanctioned by the Taliban’s supreme leader, Akhundzada. The public execution was condemned by the UN Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan in December 2025.

The execution marked the 11th judicial killing carried out by the Taliban since their return to power in 2021, according to Afghanistan’s Supreme Court.

TALIBAN’S NEW PENAL CODE DIVIDES SOCIETY INTO FOUR SOCIAL CLASSES

The document, titled “Criminal Procedure Code for Courts” (De Mahakumu Jazaai Osulnama), was issued on January 4, and circulated to provincial courts for implementation. Human rights organisation Rawadari said that the Code by the Taliban contradicts international human rights standards, including equality before the law, presumption of innocence, prohibition of torture, and fair trial rights. The code relies heavily on confessions and testimony for proof, lacks provisions for defence lawyers or the right to remain silent, and allows broad discretionary punishments (ta’zir), it added.

The Code explicitly divides society into four hierarchical categories. They are, religious scholars (ulama), the elite (ashraf or aristocrats), the middle class, and the lower class.

Punishments for the same offence vary based on the offender’s class rather than the crime’s severity.

Rawadari quotes the provision as follows. For crimes committed by religious scholars, “only advice is given”; for elites, “summons and advice”; for the middle class, “imprisonment”; and for the lower class, “imprisonment plus corporal punishment”.

This structure, critics say, entrenches social stratification and violates the principle of proportionality in sentencing.

Former Afghan Ambassador to Austria, Manizha Bakhtari, described it as creating “unequal legal classes where upper classes escape punishment through advice and warnings, while lower classes face the full force of discretionary punishment”, reported the Hasht-e Subh English, Afghanistan’s independent daily.

TALIBAN LEGITIMISES SLAVERY (GHULAMI) IN AFGHANISTAN

The code repeatedly uses the term “ghulam” (slave) to distinguish legal statuses, implicitly recognising slavery.

Article 15 of the Code says that “In the case of any crime for which a ‘hadd’ (prescribed punishment) has not been specified, ta’zir (discretionary punishment) is ruled, whether the criminal is free or a slave.”

Paragraph 5 of Article 4 specifies that hudud punishments are executed by the “Imam“, while ta’zir punishments can be carried out by the “husband” or the “master” (badaar). Hudud refers to fixed punishments under Islamic law for specific crimes considered violations of God’s rights.

Rights bodies have argued that this contradicts international law, where slavery is prohibited as a peremptory norm. The provision also enables masters and husbands to enforce punishments. This has raised concerns about institutionalised domestic violence and slave-like conditions, particularly for women and children.

The Taliban last year banned 140 books written by women. The order, issued in late August 2025, also prohibited the teaching of 18 subjects that Taliban officials said clash with Sharia law and their policies. Last year, Taliban-imposed gender restrictions compounded the tragedy for Afghan women following the deadly earthquake, which killed at least 2,200 people. Women were often the last to be rescued, or not rescued at all, due to the “no skin contact with unrelated males” rule that forbids male rescuers from touching them.

CRITICS, RIGHTS BODIES SLAM TALIBAN’S NEW LEGAL CODE

Former Attorney General of Afghanistan Mohammad Farid Hamidi called the code “a document proclaiming the conviction of all citizens”, an “unjust criminal policy based on open discrimination” that institutionalises violence against women and children while dividing citizens by status, wealth, and poverty, reported the Hasht-e Subh English.

Former National Directorate of Security chief Rahmatullah Nabil said it proves “politicised religion and rigid interpretations offer no future for Afghanistan”. The Afghanistan Women’s Justice Movement condemned it as “the legalisation of brutality” that entrenches gender apartheid.

The UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, noted the code’s “deeply troubling” implications and said he was reviewing it from human rights and Sharia perspectives. Rawadari urged an immediate halt to its implementation and sought its repeal, calling on the United Nations, International Criminal Court, and global human rights bodies to intervene.

Meanwhile, the UN’s Under-Secretary-General Rosemary DiCarlo concluded her visit to Kabul on 25 January. During the visit, she “raised concerns regarding restrictions on UN Afghan female staff, as well as the broader limitations on women’s access to education, work, and public life, and urged their immediate lifting”.

Taken together, the Taliban’s new legal code formalises inequality, legitimises coercion, and embeds violence into Afghanistan’s justice system under the guise of religious law, as flagged by experts and critics of the regime. By dividing society into hierarchies and recognising slavery-like legal categories, it marks an opposition to the basic principles of equality and human dignity. What is being enforced, experts caution, might normalise fear, exclusion and punishment as brutal tools of governance.

Taliban bring varna system in Afghanistan, make mullahs untouchable
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American Dennis Coyle marks 1 year of detention in Afghanistan

By

Monday marks one year since Dennis Coyle, a 64-year-old academic from Colorado, was taken by force from his Kabul apartment by the Taliban. His abduction came just six days after another American, Ryan Corbett, was released at the start of President Trump’s second term.
Coyle, who spent nearly two decades in Afghanistan conducting language research, is being held by the Taliban General Directorate of Intelligence in near-solitary confinement with no charges filed, according to his family. Coyle’s capture so soon after Corbett’s release illustrates the ongoing risks faced by Americans in Afghanistan, even those with long-standing legal status and deep ties to local communities.

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Undated photo of Dennis Coyle, an American who is has been detained in Afghanistan by the Taliban since Jan. 26, 2025.Family of Dennis Coyle

“Dennis is a gentle, soft-spoken man who always listens deeply to others, often over a comforting cup of hot green tea, embodying the Afghan cultural emphasis of hospitality and respectful presence,” Molly Long, one of Coyle’s sisters, told CBS News. “In his nearly two decades in Afghanistan, Dennis faithfully honored the Afghan cultural values of hospitality and kindness.”

Coyle’s mother, Donna, 83, and his three sisters, Molly, Amy and Patti, have said the isolation has been crushing. He has missed births, family celebrations, and everyday moments. According to the family, Coyle is confined to a basement room, where he must ask permission to use the bathroom.

“This past year has been incredibly challenging for our family, as we’ve become entangled in the abhorrent practice of hostage diplomacy amid my brother’s wrongful detainment by the Taliban since January 27, 2025,” Long said. “We are deeply grateful for the broad bipartisan support we’ve received for President Trump to wield the formidable strength of the United States — as he has done so effectively in securing the release of over 90 hostages in Gaza, Venezuela, and around the world — to bring our brother home.”

“Our family is thankful and comforted that the president has personally committed to addressing this matter and taking a strong position on it, and we look forward to seeing Dennis again soon,” Long said.

Two Taliban officials insist Coyle is in good health and his “rights as a prisoner are protected.” They also claim formal court proceedings in his case would begin “soon.”

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In an interview in which Coyle’s case was raised last week, President Trump said he would “take a very strong position on it,” without elaborating further.

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Undated photo of American Dennis Coyle with his sisters. Coyle has been detained by the Taliban since Jan. 26, 2025.Photo provided by Dennis Coyle’s family

Last June, the U.S. government officially designated Coyle as wrongfully detained under the Robert Levinson Hostage Recovery and Hostage-Taking Accountability Act, a status that unlocks select government tools and elevates the priority of efforts to secure his release.

“The Taliban should immediately release Dennis Coyle and all Americans detained in Afghanistan and end its practice of hostage diplomacy,” the State Department told CBS News in a statement. “We remind all Americans — do not travel to Afghanistan. The Taliban has detained Americans for years and the U.S. Government cannot guarantee your safety.”

The United States does not recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s legitimate government and lacks a diplomatic presence in the country, complicating release negotiations that are often conducted by Qatar as an intermediary on behalf of the U.S.

A Qatari official declined to comment on any involvement in mediating Coyle’s case.

Acknowledging Coyle’s detention, Taliban chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told CBS News, “Negotiations have indeed taken place and are ongoing; however, both sides have not yet reached a final conclusion.”

“The Afghan government remains committed to what has been discussed with the United States. It should also be noted that Afghans have been wrongly detained by the United States and continue to be held there. Their fate, as well as the suffering of their families, is similar to that experienced by others in detention.”

“These talks should lead to concrete results and a final conclusion, ensuring that prisoners from both sides are released,” Mujahid said.

The Biden administration held negotiations with the Taliban to swap Americans detained in Afghanistan for Muhammad Rahim al Afghani, a Guantanamo Bay detainee alleged to have been an associate of Osama bin Laden, but the talks ultimately fell through. U.S. officials proposed releasing Rahim in exchange for George Glezmann, Ryan Corbett and Afghan-American Mahmoud Habibi, who was abducted in 2022, while the Taliban countered by seeking Rahim and two others while denying it held Habibi.

With the help of Qatari negotiators, Corbett and another American, William McKenty, were released last January in exchange for a Taliban figure who had been imprisoned for life on drug trafficking charges. Glezmann and another American, Faye Hall, were released in March, followed by a fifth American, Amir Amiri, who was freed last September.

Another senior Taliban official who spoke with CBS News on condition of anonymity referred to Rahim and claimed the U.S. offered a timeframe of three to six months for releasing Rahim. “When we released U.S. citizens last time, the U.S. committed to releasing the last Afghan detainee from Guantanamo. We have already made many concessions. That is enough.”

In addition to Coyle, at least one other American — a former U.S. army soldier whose purpose for traveling to Afghanistan is unclear — is believed to be currently held by the Taliban.

The State Department has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to Habibi’s return.

“We are not aware of Habibi’s current status and we [have] not arrested him,” the second senior Taliban official told CBS News.

During the first Trump administration, the U.S. took steps to normalize relations with the Taliban, including troop withdrawal agreements and increased diplomatic contacts. Last September, President Trump expressed interest in regaining access to Bagram Air Base, underscoring a desire to maintain strategic leverage in Afghanistan, while Taliban officials have signaled interest in deeper engagement with the U.S.

That engagement has stalled to an extent as the U.S. has implemented sweeping restrictions that include suspending visa issuance and entry for Afghan nationals under recent national security proclamations, tightening vetting, and pausing processing of virtually all Afghan immigration and asylum applications. The moves have significantly reduced legal pathways for Afghans seeking entry or resettlement in the U.S.

The domestic policy debate intensified following a November 2025 shooting in Washington, D.C., in which an Afghan national evacuated to the U.S. after the 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan allegedly killed a National Guardsman and wounded another. The suspect, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, previously served for several years in Afghanistan’s elite “Zero Units,” paramilitary forces that operated under CIA direction.

Still, the Taliban and the United States remain in contact, Taliban sources said, noting former U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad visited Kabul earlier this month. White House counterterrorism advisor Seb Gorka and special envoy for hostage response Adam Boehler traveled to Afghanistan to broker Amiri’s release in September.

“We are very clear that we will not offer any further goodwill gestures,” one of the senior Taliban officials told CBS News.

Last September, the Trump administration created the State Sponsor of Wrongful Detention designation to target countries or groups that hold Americans without legal justification. Modeled after the state sponsors of terrorism designation, the measure would give the State Department authority to impose sanctions, export controls and travel restrictions on nationals of designated countries that detain Americans for political leverage, and to restrict where U.S. passports may be used. To date, no countries have been designated.

Coyle’s family has launched FreeDennisCoyle.com to coordinate advocacy and share updates.

American Dennis Coyle marks 1 year of detention in Afghanistan
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The Taliban Say They’re Ready to Release U.S. Prisoners. But Which Ones?

For months, U.S. and Afghan officials have secretly negotiated the release of U.S. detainees — a priority for President Trump and a nonnegotiable prerequisite for any further diplomatic engagement with the Taliban.

Yet even as at least five U.S. prisoners have been freed from Afghanistan over the past year, talks have stalled over the fate of remaining detainees, according to three people involved in the negotiations.

While several U.S. prisoners remain in custody, Afghan officials say the release of the last Afghan inmate at Guantánamo Bay rests with the United States and should be part of any further deal.

The Guantánamo inmate’s case and the whereabouts of a U.S. citizen in Afghan custody remain a central flashpoint between the Trump administration, which accuses Afghanistan of hostage diplomacy, and a Taliban government that denies those accusations while it seeks recognition from the United States.

“We want these two American detainees to be released, and, at the same time, the fate of our detainee who is in Guantánamo should be made clear,” Zabiullah Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman, said in an interview with The Times in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar — the first time Afghan officials are making their demand public. “Our prisoner should be released.”

The Afghan detainee, Muhammad Rahim, is accused of acting as a courier and interpreter for Osama Bin Laden within Al Qaeda.

Why the Taliban have decided to comment publicly on a potential prisoner swap is unclear. But it signals an impasse in negotiations with the Trump administration, which has publicly demanded the release of at least three Americans.

The Taliban say they have only two — identified by U.S. officials as Dennis Walter Coyle, an academic held since last January, and Polynesis Jackson, a former U.S. Army soldier whose reasons for being in the country remain murky.

Afghan officials say they do not know the whereabouts of a third U.S. citizen, Mahmood Habibi, who the F.B.I. says was arrested in Afghanistan in 2022 shortly after the C.I.A. killed Ayman al-Zawahri, Al Qaeda’s leader, in Kabul.

Afghanistan’s foreign minister, Amir Khan Muttaqi, said no American prisoner was being held for bargaining purposes. “We support finding a solution to this issue as soon as possible,” Mr. Muttaqi said in a subsequent interview with The Times in Kabul. “We never arrest someone to make deals with their country.”

Mr. Muttaqi added, “We want progress in all areas with the United States,” including the reopening of the U.S. embassy in Kabul and strengthened security cooperation.

The United States does not formally recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan’s legitimate authority, but U.S. envoys have traveled several times to Afghanistan over the past year to secure the release of American detainees. At least four have already been freed under the second Trump administration, according to the White House — none of them as part of prisoner swaps.

A participant in the negotiations, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing release efforts, said the Trump administration would not consider any further public engagement until all remaining U.S. citizens were freed.

“We know the Taliban abducted and detained Mahmood Habibi over three years ago,” a State Department spokesperson said. “The Taliban should immediately release Dennis Coyle, Mahmood Habibi and all Americans detained in Afghanistan and end its practice of hostage diplomacy.”

The previous administration had offered Mr. Rahim in a prisoner swap that included Mr. Habibi, but the Taliban rejected that offer, American officials say. Instead, the Taliban government freed Ryan Corbett and William Wallace McKenty last January in exchange for Khan Mohammed, a convicted drug dealer who was released from a U.S. federal prison. The Taliban later freed three other Americans — George Glezmann and Faye Hall in March; and Amir Amiry in September.

A senior U.S. official added that Mr. Rahim would not be part of any future deal despite the Taliban government’s demands.

“We have proof the Taliban’s G.D.I. arrested him, so they are only prolonging things by refusing to admit it,” Mr. Habibi said about the General Directorate of Intelligence, Afghanistan’s intelligence agency.

The Afghan intelligence services didn’t respond to requests for comment.

An Afghan official with direct knowledge of the negotiations said that the Taliban had released U.S. detainees last year, and the United States had lifted bounties on senior Afghan officials, as part of a framework meant to settle the prisoners’ issue. But recent developments, including the deadly attack on two National Guard troops that U.S. officials say was committed by a 29-year-old Afghan man near the White House in November, had brought the negotiations to a stalemate.

The Afghan official, speaking on condition of anonymity to comment on the negotiations, said the Taliban would be willing to discuss Mr. Habibi’s fate only after other U.S. detainees and Mr. Rahim had been released. Mr. Habibi was never part of the initial framework agreed upon last year, the official added, but Mr. Rahim was.

The circumstances surrounding the detention of Mr. Jackson, like Mr. Habibi’s, are more opaque.

On Tuesday, President Trump said in a television interview about Mr. Coyle’s detention by the Taliban, “I’m not happy about them holding anybody, especially if he’s not guilty of anything.”

Mr. Rahim, the Afghan prisoner, has been held in Guantánamo since 2008 and is the last Afghan citizen there. The United States says Mr. Rahim, now 60, had advanced knowledge of Al Qaeda attacks. He was subjected to “extensive use of the C.I.A.’s enhanced-interrogation techniques,” including sleep deprivation that once lasted nearly six days, according to the Senate Committee’s Report on the C.I.A.’s Use of Torture.

Mr. Rahim’s family says he did not do anything wrong and has asked the Taliban administration to secure his release.

He has never been charged with crimes while held in Guantánamo Bay.

Safiullah Padshah and Yaqoob Akbary contributed reporting.

Elian Peltier is an international correspondent for The Times, covering Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Adam Goldman is a London-based reporter for The Times who writes about global security.

The Taliban Say They’re Ready to Release U.S. Prisoners. But Which Ones?
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Islamic Emirate Seeks Release of Mohammad Rahim for Two Americans

Mohammad Rahim has been held at Guantanamo Bay since 2008 and, according to reports, is the last Afghan prisoner in U.S. custody.

The New York Times reported that the Islamic Emirate called for the release of the last Afghan detainee at Guantanamo Bay in exchange for the release of two American citizens.

Zabihullah Mujahid told The New York Times that the Islamic Emirate wants the release of the two American citizens to be accompanied by the release of Mohammad Rahim, the last Afghan still held at Guantanamo.

Mujahid stated: “We want these two American detainees to be released, and, at the same time, the fate of our detainee who is in Guantánamo should be made clear, Our prisoner should be released.”

A source familiar with the negotiations between the U.S. and the Islamic Emirate told The New York Times that talks over a prisoner exchange between Kabul and Washington have currently reached a deadlock.

A senior U.S. official also told the newspaper that, despite repeated requests from Afghanistan, Mohammad Rahim will not be part of any future agreement between the two sides.

Political analyst Fareedullah Zazai said: “If the U.S. accepts Kabul’s request, it could send a message to the world that the consequences of the war have come to an end. Another meaning of this message is that Kabul wants to transform technical ties into political relations.”

Mohammad Rahim has been held at Guantanamo Bay since 2008 and, according to reports, is the last Afghan prisoner in U.S. custody.

Although reports of his possible release emerged in late September 2025, the matter remains unresolved to date.

Islamic Emirate Seeks Release of Mohammad Rahim for Two Americans
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Licenses of several media organizations revoked in Afghanistan

Khaama Press

Ministry of Information and Culture said it has revoked the operating licenses of all journalist support organizations except three.

In a statement released on Monday, January 26, the ministry said only three organizations were permitted to continue operating, without naming them.

The ministry claimed the decision followed complaints from journalists and media outlets about the performance of journalist support organizations but provided no further details.

Since returning to power, the Taliban authorities have introduced increasing restrictions on media operations, including content regulations and limits on press freedom.

Journalists’ rights groups say Afghan reporters face growing professional, legal, and financial pressures, with many media outlets forced to shut down or reduce operations.

The ministry alleged that many of the organizations failed to effectively support journalists and instead damaged the international credibility of Afghanistan’s media sector.

No explanation was given regarding evaluation criteria, investigation procedures, or the specific reasons for revoking the licenses of individual organizations.

The decision comes as journalists in Afghanistan continue to face mounting restrictions, raising concerns about further pressure on media independence and freedom of expression.

Licenses of several media organizations revoked in Afghanistan
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Over 80% in Afghanistan Lack Access to Reliable Electricity: UNDP

Khaama Press

The United Nations Development Programme says Afghanistan is facing a severe and persistent energy crisis, with most citizens still lacking access to reliable and sustainable electricity services.

In a report published on Monday, January 26, UNDP stated that more than 80 percent of Afghanistan’s population does not have stable access to electricity, while existing infrastructure cannot meet rising demand.

Decades of conflict, chronic underinvestment, and damage to critical infrastructure have significantly weakened Afghanistan’s power sector, particularly in rural and underserved regions.

The report notes that Afghanistan depends heavily on electricity imports from neighboring countries, leaving the national grid vulnerable to technical failures and repeated supply disruptions.

UNDP said Afghan households receive an average of only five to ten hours of electricity daily, with unplanned power outages becoming a routine challenge across many provinces.

The United Nations warned that unreliable electricity is not only a burden for families but poses serious risks to hospitals, where power cuts can disrupt surgeries and emergency care.

UNDP emphasized that expanding sustainable energy production and strengthening domestic power generation are essential to safeguarding public services and improving living conditions nationwide.

Over 80% in Afghanistan Lack Access to Reliable Electricity: UNDP
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Aimal Wali Khan Criticizes Pakistan for Blocking Trade with Afghanistan

This comes amid repeated criticism from religious scholars and politicians over the government’s treatment of Afghanistan and tribal populations.

Pakistani politicians are increasingly voicing criticism of the central government’s policies. Recently, Aimal Wali Khan, leader of the Awami National Party (ANP), accused the Pakistani government of using terrorism as a political tool.

He stated that under the pretext of counterterrorism, trade with Afghanistan, primarily affecting the Pashtun population, has been halted, while trade with India continues unhindered. He insisted that despite closed trade routes, Afghanistan is still blamed for every security incident in Pakistan.

Aimal Wali Khan said: “Today, trade in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is shut down in the name of fighting terrorism, while trade with India continues. But trade with Afghanistan is not allowed, why? They say it’s because of terrorism. Fine, if there is terrorism, shut the routes and still allow trade.”

“But every time something happens in Pakistan, leaders come forward and say it came from Afghanistan. Then who are these blocked routes really for? Are they blocked for ordinary people? For trade?”

Speaking at a large gathering, he called for the immediate reopening of all trade routes between Bajaur and Chaman, emphasizing that the Pashtun trade corridors must be restored.

He added: “This jirga demands that all trade routes from Bajaur to Chaman be fully reopened. We do not support terrorism, it must be eradicated, but trade must be promoted. This jirga urges the government to fully open all trade routes.”

Also speaking at the gathering, Haider Khan Hoti, former Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, stated that military operations alone cannot eliminate terrorism unless there are fundamental changes in Pakistan’s internal and foreign policies.

This comes amid repeated criticism from religious scholars and politicians over the government’s treatment of Afghanistan and tribal populations. Despite such criticism, the government had previously ordered residents of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to vacate their homes for planned military operations.

Aimal Wali Khan Criticizes Pakistan for Blocking Trade with Afghanistan
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Petraeus: No Chance of Reconciliation Between Kabul and Washington

He also described the agreement with the current government as one of Washington’s weakest diplomatic deals.

David Petraeus, former Director of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and former commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, has recently stated that, under current circumstances, the prospect of reconciliation and constructive engagement between Kabul and Washington seems very distant.

On this matter, Petraeus said: “This is a very difficult task and cannot happen because the prevailing view in Afghanistan has no alignment with Washington, not even on broad outlines. I don’t think reconciliation is possible right now.”

He also described the agreement with the current government as one of Washington’s weakest diplomatic deals.

In another part of his remarks, Petraeus said that the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan was an unnecessary decision.

The former CIA chief and ex-commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan added: “Yes, I clearly said at the time that withdrawal was not necessary. We could have continued our presence and efforts in Afghanistan. The level of sustainability was measured against human and financial costs; we didn’t lose a single soldier in a year and a half, and the cost to the U.S. was $25 billion compared to a defense budget of $800 to $850 billion, which is not a large amount.”

Petraeus’s remarks indicate that relations between Washington and Kabul remain strained.

Several political analysts have differing views on this matter.

Najib Rahman Shamal, a political analyst, told TOLOnews: “They had to leave Afghanistan because the continued U.S. military presence would have prolonged and intensified the devastating war in the country.”

Earlier, the former NATO Secretary General had described the withdrawal from Afghanistan as the greatest defeat in the alliance’s history.

Petraeus: No Chance of Reconciliation Between Kabul and Washington
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