Female tour guides in Afghanistan lead women-only groups as some travelers return

By ELENA BECATOROS

Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — They wandered through the museum, listening attentively as their guide explained the antiquities in display cabinets. It could have been any tour group, anywhere in the world. But there was something unusual about this one.

The group of foreigners visiting the National Museum of Afghanistan was made up only of women. Its guide was a woman, too — one of the first Afghan female tour guides in a country whose Taliban rulers impose the severest restrictions on girls and women anywhere in the world.

Somaya Moniry, 24, hadn’t known that tour guides existed, as a profession or even as a concept. But while browsing the internet for help on improving her English language skills, she stumbled upon Couchsurfing, an app where travelers connect with locals and stay in their homes.

After hosting a traveler, “I became very passionate about it and it was very interesting for me,” Moniry said. “It was very unique. I have never heard about it before, so I said: ‘Why not (do) this?’”

As she showed that first visitor around her hometown in western Afghanistan, she saw a new side to her country.

“Most of the things that we have heard (about Afghanistan) was just … negativity. The focus of the people, focus of the media, focus of headlines, all of them were just the negativity. And definitely we get influenced by that,” Moniry said.

But for her, Afghanistan is far more nuanced. While there are undoubtedly problems in a place recovering from decades of war and chaos, there is also another side to the complex, stunning country. Her love for her homeland runs deep, and she is eager to share it. She hopes to gradually change people’s perceptions.

“Whenever … I saw all of that natures, all those beauty, all those positivity, it changed my view totally,” Moniry said in her enthusiastic English. “And definitely this can be also for other people.”

One of those visitors is Australian Suzanne Sandral. She originally wanted to see Afghanistan in the 1960s but the pressures of having a family kept her away. Now at 82, she was part of Moniry’s women-only tour group in Kabul.

Afghanistan surprised her.

“It’s not what I expected at all. I expected to feel rather fearful. I expected to be given a lot of … accusatory looks. Not at all,” she said during a pause in sightseeing. “Wherever you go in the streets, if you smile at someone and give them a little nod or say hello, you get a terrific response. So it’s very different.”

Jackie Birov, a 35-year-old independent traveler from Chicago who was not part of the tour group, called the Afghan people “unbelievably hospitable.”

However, “I’m very aware that I have a lot more freedom than local women,” she said.

A fledgling industry

Four decades of war have kept tourists away from Afghanistan. But while the Taliban’s takeover of power in August 2021 sent thousands of Afghans fleeing and shocked the world, the end of its insurgency against the previous U.S.-backed government also marked a sharp drop in violence.

Attacks still occasionally occur, mainly by an Islamic State affiliate, and Western countries advise against all travel to Afghanistan. Still, the improved security is increasingly attracting foreign visitors drawn by the dramatic scenery, millennia of history and a deeply ingrained culture of hospitality.

Tourism is a fledgling industry, with annual visitors in the low thousands. Most are independent adventure travelers. But guided package tours are increasing from countries as diverse as China, Greece, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.

Afghanistan’s Taliban government is keen to welcome them. Isolated on the international stage — officially recognized only by Russia, which did so in July — the government sees how potentially lucrative tourism could be.

Tourist visas, typically single-entry ones valid for stays of up to 30 days, have become relatively simple to obtain from the few embassies that issue them. Regular flights connect Kabul with major transit hubs such as Dubai and Istanbul.

A question of ethics

For some, the idea of visiting Afghanistan as a tourist is morally abhorrent, particularly given the government’s treatment of women.

Girls are banned from education above primary school level, and women live under myriad restrictions. The government dictates what they can wear in public, where they can go and who they can go with. They cannot walk in parks or eat in restaurants. Beauty salons are banned. A very limited number of professions, such as teaching and carpet weaving, are open to them.

And the rules can change quickly.

But those involved in tourism point to the positive effects that visiting Afghanistan can have.

“I truly believe in ethical tourism,” said Zoe Stephens, 31, a British tour leader at Koryo Tours, a company specializing in unusual destinations. “I believe that you can divide politics and people, and that is the main thing for me. … A country is not a sum of its politics. It’s a sum of so much more, it’s a sum of its culture, its history, its food, and especially in Afghanistan, its people.”

Glimpses into the women’s world

Of the three recent tours Stephens led in Afghanistan, two were women-only. Working with local female guides, including Moniry, they combine key attractions with visits to women’s centers and cooking and embroidery classes from local women — worlds that are closed to male travelers.

“We always try and do something a little bit different that really makes our tours unique, as well as something that kind of gives back to the community,” Stephens said. “So I felt that working with the female tour guides does both of those things really well.”

The groups are small — one had eight women, the other three — but the company is looking to build a network of female guides across Afghanistan.

“What we try and do with this tour, especially the women’s tour, is conquer those ethical concerns,” Stephens said. “The idea is to learn about the lives of Afghan women in context.”

 

Female tour guides in Afghanistan lead women-only groups as some travelers return
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Shackled, malnourished and suffering convulsions: son of UK couple imprisoned in Afghanistan warns situation ‘escalating’ and they could die

At one point in the five and a half months they have been imprisoned in Afghanistan, Barbie and Peter Reynolds were kept in underground cells, deprived of sunlight for six weeks.

Their health is deteriorating rapidly. Peter, 80, has been chained and shackled, and recently had convulsions on the floor, much to the alarm of Barbie, 75, who herself has suffered from malnourishment and reports her hands and feet have turned blue.

“There’s a chance they die in there, and it’s escalating pretty fast,” their youngest son, Jonathan, 45, said. “They need to get to the hospital immediately.”

Since the British couple’s arrest on 1 February, the Reynolds family have been thrown into a nightmare, watching from afar as their elderly parents have struggled in a brutal prison system where they are being been held without charge.

At first, Peter and Barbie would call their family regularly from prison but there has been no contact from them for more than a month, and the UN has intervened to warn they may die in “degrading conditions” if they do not receive hospital treatment soon.

Officials from the British Foreign Office met the couple in prison last week, but there has still been no official confirmation of plans for their release.

The couple have lived in Afghanistan for 18 years, running training and education programmes.

Since the Taliban regained control in 2021 they have banned education for girls over 12, and women are not allowed to work. But Barbie became the first woman to receive a certificate of appreciation from the Taliban, which the family said showed how their work was accepted in the local context.

Jonathan said he had a vivid memory of sitting on his parents’ bed, aged 15, asking them what he should do with his life. “They said, one of the best things you can do is live in the service of others. Live to help other people, and you’ll find the greatest joy and the greatest reward,” he said from his home in Chicago.

“The reason I tell that story is I think it sheds light on who they are as people.”

After the Taliban takeover, the couple decided to stay despite the security risks. “They said: ’How could we possibly leave these people we love in their darkest hour?’ But the warning was, if you stay, you’re on your own,” Jonathan said. “They knew full well that something like this could happen.

“We’ve counted the cost as a family for that. They have always said: ‘If this does happen, don’t trade us for some terrorist who’s in prison, and don’t pay a penny in ransom money.’ But they never told us what they did want us to do, which has been really, really difficult.”

At first, Peter said he would not leave prison without Joya, an Afghan interpreter who was arrested alongside the couple and has since been released. “Dad was like: ‘You’ll have to kill me. Do not let him stay in here. He has done nothing wrong,’” Jonathan recalled. “I think they could have maybe got out a lot earlier but those kind of demands, although selfless, made it more difficult.”

Jonathan said his father had remained unflinchingly polite and upbeat, and has downplayed his health problems.

“He’ll say something like: ‘Oh, we’re being treated very well. I have a lovely mattress on the floor and there’s a bathroom nearby.’ I’m like: ‘OK, but you’re still in prison, unjustly,’” he said.

His mother, he said, had given a more honest account of their time in prison, reporting that there were women who had been there for months because they were not allowed to leave without a male to escort them.

Barbie and Peter have five children, 17 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, who live across the UK and US. They last all convened with Peter and Barbie about 18 months ago in Dubai, and are a close family despite the geographical distance between them.

Peter and Barbie Reynolds eating at an outdoor table in a courtyard
Peter and Barbie Reynolds. Photograph: Family handout

“It has been painful, stressful and emotionally taxing. The nature of my parents, they raised kids who are very much: ‘Hold my beer and I’ll fix this thing’,” he said. “We’re all fixers and we’re all make-it-happen people. And we are completely stuck.”

Despite the situation, the family have found moments of humour.

“Every time my dad calls, even from prison in Afghanistan, he says: ‘Hello son, is now a good time?’ What do you mean is now a good time?” Jonathan said. “My brother would actually joke around and say: ‘Actually I’m in a pedicure right now, can you call back in 20 minutes?’”

Jonathan said he had seen negative comments about his parents on social media and was aware of how some people perceived the case.

“I have seen people saying: ‘Let them die there, we’re not using British taxpayer money on this,’” he said.

“But this is not just an emotional plea from some adult kids saying: ‘Somebody help my parents because they were on vacation in a place they shouldn’t have been.’ That’s not what this is …. They know full well the risks, but they are being held in an unjust manner, and they are innocent.”

Shackled, malnourished and suffering convulsions: son of UK couple imprisoned in Afghanistan warns situation ‘escalating’ and they could die
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The Taliban’s top environment official wants the UN to include Afghanistan in climate talks

Associated Press
Monday 28 July 2025

The Taliban’s top environment official on Monday called for Afghanistan’s inclusion in U.N. climate talks, saying extreme weather and water scarcity are having a “profound impact” on people’s lives and the economy.

Taliban delegation attended last year’s COP29 climate talks in Azerbaijan, but as observers.

Matiul Haq Khalis, the head of the National Environmental Protection Agency, said the suspension of environmental protection projects after the Taliban takeover in 2021 had resulted in widespread harm to Afghans. Khalis said he wanted inclusion at COP30, which is being held in Brazil later this year.

Russia is the only country to recognize the Taliban’s government.

Afghanistan is severely affected by climate change,” Khalis told a conference in Kabul. “ Drought, water shortages, declining arable land, flash floods, and threats to food security are having a profound impact on people’s lives and the economy.

Earlier this month, the U.N. published a report that said June was marked by below-average precipitation and higher-than-average temperatures across Afghanistan.

By the end of May, the significant decline in soil moisture had already negatively affected the yield and productivity of rainfed wheat, according to the report from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

“The current monsoon season has started earlier than usual, beginning in May instead of the typical June or July, and is more intense than in recent years. Forecasts indicate above-average rainfall in many regions.”

In Baku last November, Khalis told The Associated Press that authorities had prepared national action plans to deal with climate change and would be updating their climate goals.

He said the country had great potential for wind and solar power but needed international support to develop it.

The Taliban’s top environment official wants the UN to include Afghanistan in climate talks
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Water Supply Project Launched to Address Kabul’s Growing Water Crisis

This project, implemented in cooperation with UNICEF, spans 11 kilometers and is expected to provide drinking water for 60,000 to 70,000 families in Kabul.

As part of efforts to improve access to drinking water in Kabul, the Afghanistan Urban Water Supply and Sewerage Company has inaugurated a project to produce and transfer water from Qargha Dam to the 10,000-cubic-meter reservoir at Kabul Polytechnic University.

This project, implemented in cooperation with UNICEF, spans 11 kilometers and is expected to provide drinking water for 60,000 to 70,000 families in Kabul.

Hamidullah Hemat, the project manager, said: “It is 11 kilometers long, using 450-millimeter panels. Two wells have been dug, with a pressure of about 25 to 30 liters per second. This facility will provide water for 60 to 70 thousand families.”

Ghulam Rahman Kazem, CEO of the Emirati Urban Water Supply and Sewerage Company, also said: “What we don’t have now, we hope to acquire and use for our fellow citizens, and needs will be met more easily.”

Meanwhile, Islamic Emirate officials emphasized at the project’s inauguration that the water shortage problem in Kabul is serious, but they have plans to manage it.

Aminullah Obaid, Governor of Kabul, said at the ceremony: “We assure you that the existing problems will be resolved shortly, and the Islamic Emirate intends to supply clean drinking water to the people from the Shatoot Dam and Panjshir River.”

Ahmad Jan Bilal, head of governmental companies, added: “Before this problem worsens or becomes a serious issue, we estimated that within our capacity and resources, a solution must be found.”

Meanwhile, the acting Minister of Economy described the water crisis as one of the consequences of war and climate change and called for targeted planning to manage internal water resources.

The Ministry of Agriculture, emphasizing the need for public awareness, added that it is working on building canals and check dams to combat water shortage challenges.

Din Mohammad Hanif, Acting Minister of Economy, said: “Billions of cubic meters of water that flow out should be managed and used so that the country can be saved from this crisis. The Islamic Emirate is determined to maximize water usage through proper management to avoid famine.”

Sadr Azam Osmani, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Irrigation, and Livestock, also added: “To our fellow citizens, I say: manage water, avoid waste and unnecessary usage, because this is a matter of our livelihood.”

This project has been launched while previously, the UN Humanitarian Resettlement Program described Kabul’s water shortage crisis as “unprecedented” and emphasized that to combat it, extensive investment, inter-agency cooperation, and increased public awareness on optimal water usage are necessary.

Water Supply Project Launched to Address Kabul’s Growing Water Crisis
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Over 1.5 Million Afghans Returned from Neighboring Countries in 2025

The UN body also noted that the pace of deportations from Iran has gradually declined.

According to OCHA’s report: “As of 19 July, 1,541,000 Afghans have returned to Afghanistan in 2025, including 1,201,000 from Iran and 340,000 from Pakistan. Some 460,000 Afghans returned from Iran between 1 and 19 July, although a gradual decline in daily returnee caseloads has been observed in the last 10 days with around 9,000 Afghans arriving per day as of 19 July; numbers are understood to have further reduced since. This trend is likely influenced by ongoing diplomatic discussions between de facto authority officials from Afghanistan and the Government of Iran.”

At the same time, the Islamic Emirate reported that 11,605 people returned to the country yesterday, with 1,811 of them transferred to their respective provinces.

Abdulmutalib Haqqani, spokesman for the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation, said: “In the past two days, 19,002 migrants have returned from Iran and Pakistan, both voluntarily and through forced deportation.”

Ali Reza Karimi, a migrants’ rights advocate, stated: “Unfortunately, between 10,000 to 20,000 Afghan migrants are being forcibly deported from Iran on a daily basis. The Afghan government must respond by establishing reception centers, providing initial aid, and creating short-term job opportunities to ease the burden on returnees.”

Meanwhile, some Afghans recently deported from Iran have shared painful stories about their treatment by Iranian police and the hardships they faced.

Abdul Wadood, a deportee from Iran, said: “We have no shelter in Afghanistan. Our request from the Islamic Emirate is to support and help us.”

Jalal, a deported child from Iran, said: “My wish is to go to school. I ask the government to help me study.”

This comes as the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, during a visit to Iran, called for a halt to forced deportations of Afghan migrants and proposed a trilateral meeting between Tehran, Kabul, and UNHCR.

Over 1.5 Million Afghans Returned from Neighboring Countries in 2025
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Iran Deports Over 700,000 Afghans in One Month, Kabul Demands Coordination

The Commission for Refugee Affairs has announced that over 700,000 Afghan migrants were forcibly deported from Iran over the past month.

Ahmadullah Wasiq, spokesperson for the commission, criticized Iran’s inappropriate treatment of Afghan migrants and called on the Iranian government to coordinate the deportation process with the Afghan government.

Wasiq also urged international organizations to expand their humanitarian assistance to returnees in cooperation with the Refugee Affairs Commission.

The spokesperson said: “We were even prepared that if the war between Iran and Israel had prolonged and Iranians had come to Afghanistan as refugees, the Afghan government would have accommodated them, and measures had been taken in this regard. Nevertheless, we strongly condemn the treatment of Afghan migrants by Iranian authorities, and humanitarian organizations have also condemned these actions.”

Fatima, one of the deportees from Iran who suffers from a heart condition, said she had lived with her family in Iran for three years.

She described the mistreatment by Iranian officials: “We were brought from the camp, and they told us not to bring anything because they would help us. But on the way, no one gave us anything, and my children became very hungry. They harassed us during the journey, taking our money and phones.”

Fatima also called on the Islamic Emirate to provide not only shelter but also employment opportunities for her husband.

She said: “Our request to the Islamic Emirate is to help my husband find work. We have no house here, and we need shelter.”

According to the Refugee Affairs Commission, in the past month, six pregnant women safely gave birth after receiving medical services upon reaching the Islam Qala zero point border.

Also during this period, the bodies of 95 deceased individuals, most of whom were ill, were returned to Afghanistan from the border via ambulance.

Among the deportees, many were found to be suffering from tuberculosis, COVID-19, and skin diseases. Investigations show that a significant number of them contracted these illnesses in Iranian camps.

Iran Deports Over 700,000 Afghans in One Month, Kabul Demands Coordination
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Germany Clarifies Its Position on Relations with Afghanistan’s Interim Govt

Géza Andreas von Geyr (also known as Gräf Lambsdorff) cited the human rights situation in Afghanistan as the main reason for this position.

Germany’s ambassador to Russia has emphasized that his country will not recognize Afghanistan’s interim government in the near future.

Géza Andreas von Geyr (also known as Gräf Lambsdorff) cited the human rights situation in Afghanistan as the main reason for this position.

He stated, “We will not recognize the Taliban politically in the near future. The German government has made this clear. If you look at the current governing system in Afghanistan, especially the situation of women and girls, it is evident that we have a difference of opinion with Russia in this regard.”

In response to Russia’s decision to recognize the Islamic Emirate, the German diplomat added that Germany’s stance on this issue differs from that of Moscow.

He further noted that Germany conducts its technical negotiations with Afghanistan’s interim government through specific established channels and does not need Russian cooperation in this area.

Lambsdorff said, “Russia is the only country so far to take such a step, and by doing so, it has distanced itself from the international consensus. When we engage in technical talks, we do so through previously established channels. I don’t believe we need Russia’s assistance for this.”

Political analyst Wais Naseri commented, “Unlike Russia, which has long-term strategic economic, political, security, and geopolitical interests in Afghanistan, the Germans are not in a hurry to recognize the current government because of the constraints they face within NATO and the European Union.”

These statements come as the interim government has appointed two diplomats to provide consular services for Afghan citizens residing in the German cities of Bonn and Berlin.

Germany Clarifies Its Position on Relations with Afghanistan’s Interim Govt
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Ishaq Dar: Not the Right Time to Recognize Afghan Interim Government

By TOLOnews

Responding to Russia’s decision to recognize the Islamic Emirate, Dar said that the move was made independently and based on Russia’s national interests.

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister, Ishaq Dar, says that the appropriate time to recognize Afghanistan’s interim government has not yet arrived.

Responding to Russia’s decision to recognize the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, Dar said that the move was made independently and based on Russia’s national interests.

He remarked: “Action of Russia is obviously a sovereign country. We can’t say that it should be done or should not be done. It is their sovereign right to decide, and they have done it. We haven’t done it. That means we do not feel it appropriate. At this stage, we have upgraded the charge d’affaires to ambassadorship in May, 30th of May.”

Speaking at the Atlantic Council meeting in Washington, Dar emphasized that Islamabad seeks a stable, inclusive, and sovereign Afghanistan.

“A stable Afghanistan is in our vital interest. We want an Afghanistan that is peaceful, inclusive and sovereign. However, the threat of terrorism from Afghan soil is real, and the biggest threat to Pakistan’s soil,” he said.

Dar also highlighted the deep cultural and historical ties between the two countries and reaffirmed Pakistan’s readiness to cooperate fully with Afghanistan.

He once again urged the interim government to uphold its commitments in the fight against terrorism.

“We want to fully cooperate with the neighbour. We have centuries old relationship. We have almost same culture. So, the only thing is that their soil should not be allowed against any country but to talk of Pakistan for terrorist activities. This is the only ask.” he said.

These remarks come as relations between Kabul and Islamabad have recently entered a new phase, with the Afghan Acting Foreign Minister expected to visit Islamabad within a week.

Ishaq Dar: Not the Right Time to Recognize Afghan Interim Government
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With no access to education beyond the 6th grade, girls in Afghanistan turn to religious schools

By ELENA BECATOROS
Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — For six hours every day after school, Nahideh works in a cemetery, collecting water from a nearby shrine to sell to mourners visiting loved ones’ graves. She dreams of becoming a doctor — but knows it is a futile dream.

When the next school year starts, she will be enrolling in a madrassa, a religious school, to learn about the Quran and Islam — and little else.

“I prefer to go to school, but I can’t, so I will go to a madrassa,” she said, dark brown eyes peering out from beneath her tightly wrapped black headscarf. “If I could go to school then I could learn and become a doctor. But I can’t.”

At the age of 13, Nahideh is in the last grade of primary school, the limit of education allowed for girls in Afghanistan. The country’s Taliban government banned girls from secondary school and university three years ago — the only country in the world to do so. The ban is part of myriad restrictions on women and girls, dictating everything from what they can wear to where they can go and who they can go with.

With no option for higher education, many girls and women are turning to madrassas instead.

The only learning allowed

“Since the schools are closed to girls, they see this as an opportunity,” said Zahid-ur-Rehman Sahibi, director of the Tasnim Nasrat Islamic Sciences Educational Center in Kabul. “So, they come here to stay engaged in learning and studying religious sciences.”

The center’s roughly 400 students range in ages from about 3 to 60, and 90% are female. They study the Quran, Islamic jurisprudence, the sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, and Arabic, the language of the Quran.

Most Afghans, Sahibi noted, are religious. “Even before the schools were closed, many used to attend madrassas,” he said. “But after the closure of schools, the interest has increased significantly, because the doors of the madrassas remain open to them.”

No recent official figures are available on the number of girls enrolled in madrassas, but officials say the popularity of religious schools overall has been growing. Last September, Deputy Minister of Education Karamatullah Akhundzada said at least 1 million students had enrolled in madrassas over the past year alone, bringing the total to over 3 million.

Studying the Quran

Sheltered from the heat of an early summer’s day in a basement room at the Tasnim Nasrat center, Sahibi’s students knelt at small plastic tables on the carpeted floor, their pencils tracing lines of Arabic script in their Qurans. All 10 young women wore black niqabs, the all-encompassing garment that includes a veil, leaving only the eyes visible.

“It is very good for girls and women to study at a madrassa, because … the Quran is the word of Allah, and we are Muslims,” said 25-year-old Faiza, who had enrolled at the center five months earlier. “Therefore, it is our duty to know what is in the book that Allah has revealed to us, to understand its interpretation and translation.”

Given a choice, she would have studied medicine. While she knows that is now impossible, she still harbors hope that if she shows she is a pious student dedicated to her religion, she will be eventually allowed to. The medical profession is one of the very few still open to women in Afghanistan.

“When my family sees that I am learning Quranic sciences and that I am practicing all the teachings of the Quran in my life, and they are assured of this, they will definitely allow me to continue my studies,” she said.

Her teacher said he’d prefer if women were not strictly limited to religious studies.

“In my opinion, it is very important for a sister or a woman to learn both religious sciences and other subjects, because modern knowledge is also an important part of society,” Sahibi said. “Islam also recommends that modern sciences should be learned because they are necessary, and religious sciences are important alongside them. Both should be learned simultaneously.”

A controversial ban

The female secondary and higher education ban has been controversial in Afghanistan, even within the ranks of the Taliban itself. In a rare sign of open dissent, Deputy Foreign Minister Sher Abbas Stanikzai said in a public speech in January that there was no justification for denying education to girls and women.

His remarks were reportedly not well tolerated by the Taliban leadership; Stanikzai is now officially on leave and is believed to have left the country. But they were a clear indication that many in Afghanistan recognize the long-term impact of denying education to girls.

“If this ban persists until 2030, over four million girls will have been deprived of their right to education beyond primary school,” UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said in a statement at the start of Afghanistan’s new school year in March. “The consequences for these girls — and for Afghanistan — are catastrophic. The ban negatively impacts the health system, the economy, and the future of the nation.”

The importance of religious education

For some in this deeply conservative society, the teachings of Islam are hard to overstate.

“Learning the Holy Quran is the foundation of all other sciences, whether it’s medicine, engineering, or other fields of knowledge,” said Mullah Mohammed Jan Mukhtar, 35, who runs a boys’ madrassa north of Kabul. “If someone first learns the Quran, they will then be able to learn these other sciences much better.”

His madrassa first opened five years ago with 35 students. Now it has 160 boys aged 5-21, half of whom are boarders. Beyond religious studies, it offers a limited number of other classes such as English and math. There is also an affiliated girls’ madrassa, which currently has 90 students, he said.

“In my opinion, there should be more madrassas for women,” said Mukhtar, who has been a mullah for 14 years. He stressed the importance of religious education for women. “When they are aware of religious verdicts, they better understand the rights of their husbands, in-laws and other family members.”

With no access to education beyond the 6th grade, girls in Afghanistan turn to religious schools
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Zalmay Khalilzad: “A Solution Must Be Found for the Durand Line”

Khalilzad also emphasized his disagreement with the view that no Afghan president is capable of solving this issue.

The former U.S. Special Envoy for Afghan Peace, Zalmay Khalilzad, says a solution must be found for the Durand Line between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In a podcast interview, Khalilzad stated that resolving this issue between the two countries requires leadership that enjoys public support. He added that Imran Khan in Pakistan is capable of such leadership, but in Afghanistan, the search continues for a leader who can address this challenge.

Khalilzad also emphasized his disagreement with the view that no Afghan president is capable of solving this issue.

The former U.S. envoy further remarked, “I think you need strong, good leaders with backing of their people. I think Imran Khan would be such a leader in my view in Pakistan. And in Afghanistan, we’re still in search of a leader that could do that.”

In another part of his remarks, he said that for Afghanistan to function effectively and for Pakistan to avoid the risk of a two-front conflict, a solution must be found.

He stated: “I think over time, for Afghanistan to work and for Pakistan not to face the potential of a two-front conflict, which I think has been, understandably, Pakistan has been concerned about the security establishment, and so there has to be a solution for this.”

Khalilzad sees the future of both countries in regional cooperation. According to him, Afghanistan and Pakistan, along with the five Central Asian countries, should now become a unified economic zone similar to the European Union.

He added: “I see the future in a regional cooperation, perhaps starting with economic and trade issues, to the west of Pakistan. Because Central Asia has also come on, given the disintegration of the Soviet Union, in which Afghanistan and Pakistan played a role in increasing the cost of the occupation of Afghanistan, took huge risks and paid a huge price. But now, these two countries, plus the five Central Asian countries, should be a single economic zone, alike EU.”

The former American official stated that this regional cooperation could begin based on critical minerals, in which all these countries are relatively rich.

So far, the Islamic Emirate has not commented on the remarks made by the former U.S. envoy for Afghan peace.

Zalmay Khalilzad: “A Solution Must Be Found for the Durand Line”
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