Timeline: Taliban crackdown on Afghan women’s education, rights

Al Jazeera

21 Dec 2022

Group has backtracked on promises to guarantee certain rights for girls and women since its return to power last year.

The Taliban has backtracked on their promise to guarantee the rights of girls to be educated and given other freedoms, returning to their previous policies when they were last in power.

The group, which took over Kabul 16 months ago, argues its rules are in keeping with their interpretation of Islam, although Afghanistan is the only Muslim country that prohibits girls from being educated.

Here is a timeline of its clampdown:

August 2021: The Taliban returns

The Taliban returns to power in Kabul on August 15 during a chaotic final exit of the United States-led foreign troops, ending a 20-year war and precipitating the collapse of the Western-backed government of President Ashraf Ghani.

The group promises to give Afghans more freedoms than their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001, saying it will honour human rights obligations, including those of women.

September 2021: Gender-segregated classrooms

The Taliban announces on September 12 last year that women can attend universities with gender-segregated entrances and classrooms, but they can only be taught by professors of the same sex or old men. Other restrictions included the wearing of hijabs as part of a compulsory dress code.

March 2022: Girls barred from school

On March 23 this year, girls’ secondary schools were supposed to reopen, but the Taliban rescinded the directive and tens of thousands of teenagers were shut out and ordered to stay home.

May 2022: Stay at home

Taliban supreme leader Hibatullah Akhunzada orders women on May 7 to fully cover themselves, including their faces, in public and generally stay at home. Women are also banned from inter-city travel without a male escort.

August 2022: Protests break out

Taliban fighters beat women protesters chanting “bread, work and freedom” and fire into the air on August 13 to break up a demonstration outside the education ministry in Kabul.

The government forces also detain and beat journalists covering the protests.

November 2022: Parks out of bounds

Women are banned from entering parks, fun fairs, gyms and public baths.

December 2022: Execution, floggings

The Taliban carries out its first public execution since returning to power, that of a convicted murderer who is shot dead on December 7 by his victim’s father in western Farah province.

The next day, more than 1,000 people watch as 27 Afghans, including women, are flogged in Charikar in central Parwan province for a range of offences ranging from sodomy and deception to forgery and debauchery.

Floggings in public have since been regularly carried out in other provinces.

December 2022: No university for women

Armed guards stop hundreds of young women from entering university campuses on December 21, a day after a terse release from the minister for higher education announces an order “suspending the education of females until further notice”.

SOURCE: AFP
Timeline: Taliban crackdown on Afghan women’s education, rights
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Taliban Release 2 Americans Detained in Afghanistan

The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The Taliban released two Americans who had been detained in Afghanistan on Tuesday, including Ivor Shearer, an independent filmmaker who had been held since August, according to a person with knowledge of the release.

The Biden administration did not confirm the name of either American, but an administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to detail a sensitive process, said that both had been safely taken to Qatar and were en route to being reunited with their families.

Ned Price, the State Department spokesman, said the release was not part of a prisoner exchange and that no money was paid for the Americans’ release. He said it appeared to be a “good-will gesture” on the part of the Taliban.

Mr. Shearer was arrested along with his Afghan producer, Faizullah Faizbakhsh, over the summer as they were filming near the site of a drone strike that had killed the Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, a media watchdog. The group said it had no information about whether Mr. Faizbakhsh was still being held.

The Americans’ release was first reported by CNN, and came as the Taliban moved to suspend university education for women. The release came almost two weeks after administration officials announced that Brittney Griner, an American basketball player, had been freed after months in Russian custody. Ms. Griner’s release was part of a prisoner swap in exchange for Viktor Bout, a Russian arms dealer.

In September, an American engineer, Mark R. Frerichs, was freed from Afghanistan on the condition that the United States release Haji Bashir Noorzai, a prominent Afghan tribal leader who had been convicted of drug trafficking.

Officials in the Biden administration have spoken candidly about how much — and how unexpectedly — the issue of Americans detained overseas has occupied their time and resources. While only four countries held Americans wrongfully from 2001 to 2005, at least 19 countries do now, according to research complied by the James W. Foley Legacy Foundation, the advocacy organization started by Diane Foley and named for her son, who was killed by terrorists in the Middle East.

“I had not fully anticipated the prominence that this responsibility would play in my job, but it has been very significant,” Jake Sullivan, President Biden’s national security adviser, told The New York Times this week. Recently, Roger Carstens, the Biden administration’s top hostage negotiator, spoke publicly about what it was like to bring Ms. Griner home — she spent a large chunk of the 18-hour flight home chatting with him.

“It’s horrific to leave an American wrongfully detained in a foreign jail cell,” Mr. Carstens said in an interview with CNN’s “State of the Union” last week.

The Biden administration is also working to free Paul Whelan, another American imprisoned in Russia. Activists saw Mr. Shearer’s arrest as a chilling sign of the Taliban’s approach to the news media after the group seized power in Afghanistan last year. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Mr. Shearer and Mr. Faizbakhsh were stopped by Taliban intelligence officials in August, blindfolded and taken into detention.

“The Taliban’s increasing pressure and escalating numbers of detentions of journalists and media workers, including the detention of American filmmaker Ivor Shearer and his Afghan colleague Faizullah Faizbakhsh, show the group’s utter lack of commitment to the principle of freedom of the press in Afghanistan,” Carlos Martinez de la Serna, the group’s program director, said in a statement at the time.

As he oversaw the chaotic and violent drawdown of U.S. forces from Afghanistan last year, Mr. Biden said American officials were relying on commitments by the Taliban to allow people to leave the country. The Taliban have agreed to release several imprisoned Americans this year, but continues to clash with the United States over access to humanitarian aid and the seizure of funds from Afghanistan’s central bank after the Taliban took over.

Edward Wong contributed reporting.

Katie Rogers is a White House correspondent, covering life in the Biden administration, Washington culture and domestic policy. She joined The Times in 2014.

Taliban Release 2 Americans Detained in Afghanistan
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Taliban Bar Women From College Classes, in a Stark Reversal of Rights

Christina Goldbaum and 
The New York Times
Dec. 21, 2022

The new Afghan government has returned to its hard-line stances from the 1990s, instituting public beatings and executions as well further restricting women’s rights.

The Afghan government on Tuesday barred women from attending private and public universities, officials said, in the latest severe blow to women’s rights under a Taliban administration that has all but reinstituted the hard-line rule the group maintained during its first stretch in power during the 1990s.

The move is the most recent sign that the Taliban’s leadership has cast aside any intent to moderate, and it is the realization of fears that 20 years of Western human rights and governance initiatives would be undone after the Taliban took power last year. The new government in recent weeks has reinstated Shariah law, carried out public floggings across the country and conducted one public execution.

All that is likely to threaten the influx of badly needed international aid that has kept Afghanistan from the brink of famine as it grapples with a devastating economic collapse.

The news on Tuesday, delivered in a letter from the higher education ministry and confirmed by the ministry’s spokesman to The New York Times, was crushing to Afghan women who had been raised in an era of relative opportunity, but who have seen those rights slowly erased since the Western-backed government collapsed late in the summer of 2021.

In March, the new government reneged on promises to allow girls to attend public high schools, with officials saying they needed more time to create a plan for them to reopen in accordance with Islamic law. Many high-school-aged girls had held out hope that their schools would reopen because universities had continued to allow women to attend classes.

But the decision on Tuesday stamped out any vestige of that hope.

“The university was the only window of hope for me, but today we are stuck in such a black hole,” said Sakina Sama, 22, a second-year university student studying journalism in Balkh Province, in northern Afghanistan.

Ms. Sama had worked in a photo and video studio under the previous Western-backed government. But she lost her job when the Taliban seized power and restricted women to jobs mostly in education and health care, serving fellow women. Continuing her education was her only joy since the Taliban seized power, she said.

“I have no more hope or motivation left,” she said. “If being a girl is a sin, and I was born a girl, it is not my fault.”

Farhanaz, 19, who asked to be identified only by her first name for fear of retribution, said that after the Taliban seized power last year, she nearly lost her motivation to study as she watched the new government roll out a flood of edicts rolling back women’s freedoms.

Girls were banned from high schools, and women from public spaces like parks. The morality police appeared on the streets chastising women who were not covered from head to toe in all-concealing burqas and headpieces in public.

Farhanaz said she and her friends had clung to hope that the new government would eventually return to its early pledges to moderate and allow women to retain a place in society, as officials sought international recognition for their administration.

Then on Tuesday a letter by the spokesman for the Ministry of Higher Education, Hafez Ziaullah Hashemi, began circulating on social media, instructing private and public universities to suspend women from attending university classes until further notice. Mr. Hashemi said that the decision was made by the cabinet of the new government and ordered universities to inform the ministry once they had dismissed all female students.

For Farhanaz and her sister — an 18-year-old who had just been accepted to a university psychology program — the news was devastating. She said her sister had locked herself in her room, sobbing at the news.

“Now I don’t even have the motivation to survive,” Farhanaz said.

Western officials condemned the government’s action on Tuesday.

“This unacceptable stance will have significant consequences for the Taliban,” Ned Price, the State Department spokesman, said at a news conference in Washington. Mr. Price would not give details on what penalties the United States or its allies might impose.

Even as the world was receiving news of the latest hard-line government ruling, another decision was unfolding: Mr. Price said that in what appeared to be a good-will gesture, Afghan officials had released two Americans who had been detained in the country. Mr. Price did not identify the freed Americans, and he said that their release was not part of a prisoner or detainee swap and that no ransom or payment had been involved.

The ruling on women’s rights was another point of evidence that ideological hard-liners within the Taliban movement have been imposing their influence over those who have urged moderation and engagement with the international community.

Since the first months of Taliban governance began in August last year, initial promises by officials to preserve the right to education and employment for women have given way to increasingly conservative edicts, including by the supreme leader of the Taliban movement, Sheikh Haibatullah Akhundzada.

Sheikh Haibatullah, who is based in Kandahar, the southern heartland of the Taliban movement, has appointed allies to government posts — including the ministries of education and higher education — and sought counsel from ultraconservative clerics.

In recent months, his allies have pushed policies including the appointment of thousands of religious scholars to government offices, the waiving of standard academic requirements for former Taliban fighters in universities, and the implementation of harsh interpretations of Shariah law that the first Taliban government enforced in the 1990s.

For many Afghans, the return to hard-line justice has been chilling.

This month, Mohammad Shaker Hashimi, a truck driver in Charikar, a city north of Kabul, awoke to the sound of announcements from loudspeakers summoning residents to the city’s stadium at 9 a.m. for a “punishment ceremony.”

He walked to the stadium and joined a crowd of around 400 people, he said. After instructing the crowd not to take photos or videos, local officials escorted 18 men with hands tied behind their backs and nine women clad in all-concealing blue burqas onto the field and separated them by gender.

Two judges gave a speech about Shariah law and explained the prisoners’ crimes: Women were charged with running away from home and moral corruption, while the men were found guilty of theft, adultery and selling drugs, among other crimes, Mr. Hashimi said. Then the officials began to whip them — between 20 and 39 lashes each.

“When they beat the women with cables, one of the women fell to the ground, and I could not watch more and left,” Mr. Hashimi said.

He said that a wave of hope brought by the end of the long war was being bitterly undone in recent weeks, bringing a sense of helplessness.

“In the past, there had been explosions and suicide attacks, and we thought that the war and violence were over,” he said. But now, he added, “the torture of people has resumed in public.”

Safiullah Padshah contributed reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan, and Edward Wong from Washington.

Christina Goldbaum is a correspondent in the Kabul, Afghanistan, bureau. 

Najim Rahim is a reporter in the Kabul, Afghanistan, bureau

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UN Chief Seeks Afghan Women, Girls’ Access to Work and Education

Analysts said that there hasn’t been significant progress when it comes to ensuring inclusivity in the formation of the government.

UN Secretary General António Guterres at a press conference on Monday stressed the need for the inclusion of all ethnic groups in the power structures in Afghanistan and said it is important that all ethnic groups are represented.

Guterres also emphasized the need to ensure human rights in Afghanistan, in particular women and girls’ rights, the right of women to work, the right of girls to attend school at all levels “without discrimination.”

“Well, there are several clear things that we believe the Taliban must deliver from the point of view of the interests of the international community and from the point of view of the interests of Afghanistan itself,” he said.

This comes as Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian stressed the need for the formation of an inclusive government in Afghanistan, saying that it would pave the ground for enduring security and stability in the country.

“We believe that the path to enduring security and stability in Afghanistan is through the demands and decision of the people of the country with the formation of an inclusive government,” Abdollahian told the Iran Discussion Forum.

The Islamic Emirate has once again insisted that its government is inclusive and that efforts are underway to remove problems.

“The government and its formation is inclusive. Officials of the Islamic Emirate are making efforts so that we don’t have any problem in any field,” said Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesman for the Islamic Emirate.

Analysts said that there hasn’t been significant progress when it comes to ensuring inclusivity in the formation of the government.

“They want the people of Afghanistan from all ethnic groups to be represented. Therefore, I think there has been less progress in this respect,” said Moeen Gul Samkani, a political analyst.

The international community has put the formation of an inclusive government, ensuring of human rights, particularly women’s girls, and preventing Afghan soil from being used by terrorist groups as the preconditions for the recognition of the government of the Islamic Emirate.

UN Chief Seeks Afghan Women, Girls’ Access to Work and Education
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As Afghans Suffer, U.S. Stalls on Plan to Return Central Bank Funds

SARAH LAZARE
 

In These Times

In September, the U.S. created a foundation that was supposed to unfreeze Afghanistan’s foreign assets. Yet, interviews with trustees reveal that, in three months, no funds have been disbursed—or concrete plans made—to help the Afghan people.

The Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in August 2021 and, in response, Europe, the United Arab Emirates and the United States froze the Afghan central bank’s roughly $9 billion in foreign assets — $7 billion of which was under control of the United States.

Without access to these funds — alongside a lattice of sanctions, a decline in humanitarian aid and harsh political turmoil under Taliban rule — Afghanistan has been led into an economic collapse with a dramatic uptick in poverty; 6 million Afghans are facing the immediate risk of starvation. According to calculations from the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), a left-leaning think tank, U.S. sanctions on Afghanistan (including the freezing of these central bank assets) could kill more people than 20 years of U.S. war and occupation.

In September, the Biden administration placed half of the U.S.-controlled assets into a private foundation, trusteed by just four people, ​to be used for the benefit of the people of Afghanistan while keeping them out of the hands of the Taliban and other malign actors,” according to a joint statement from the departments of Treasury and State.

But interviews with two of those four trustees reveal that no funds have yet been disbursed to help the Afghan people and there are no policies in place to do so immediately. One trustee underscored that it is unlikely the foundation will be a vehicle to quickly return the assets to Afghanistan’s central bank while the Taliban is maintaining oppressive rule.

This lack of progress raises concerns that the Biden administration is on course to worsen the rapidly spiraling humanitarian crisis. ​Who pays the price,” asks Basir Bita, an Afghan activist who works with the Afghan refugee community in Canada and who has family in Afghanistan, ​for the U.S. freezing the funds? The public. The people who live in Afghanistan.”

Creation of a foundation

The United States froze the Afghan central bank’s assets amid public outcry over the U.S. military’s withdrawal from Afghanistan. The Biden administration depicted the move as a refusal to legitimize Taliban rule.

Yet, according to Andrés Arauz, a senior research fellow at the CEPR, ​The reality is that central banks don’t just hold government money — they also and mostly hold commercial banks’ money. They are not only banks of governments; they are also banks of banks. It was important for the working of Afghanistan’s financial system, and therefore its economy, that their banks have access to money that was seized by the United States.”

The freezing of the assets plunged Afghanistan into a liquidity crisis, in which people are unable to access their cash and perform essential transactions. Alongside the liquidity crisis is hyper-inflation, which has worsened the acute and widespread problem of hunger. Between June 2021 and July 2022, the price of wheat flour in Afghanistan skyrocketed 68% and cooking oil jumped 55%, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross. Seventy percent of homes are ​unable to meet basic food and non-food needs,” the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies warned in June. Reports have emerged of Afghans selling their daughters, and their kidneys, in an effort to survive hunger and rising debt.

Between June 2021 and July 2022, the price of wheat flour in Afghanistan skyrocketed 68% and cooking oil jumped 55%, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross. Seventy percent of homes are “unable to meet basic food and non-food needs,” the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies warned in June.

Citing the deepening catastrophe, some activists and lawmakers have been calling for the Biden administration to take a less collectively punitive approach and return the assets to Afghanistan’s central bank. In January, the New York Times editorial board published an op-ed warning against a policy of letting the Afghan central bank fall apart, titled, ​Let Innocent Afghans Have Their Money.”

In the midst of all of this, in February, the Biden administration issued an executive order to set aside $3.5 billion of the U.S.-held central bank assets for victims of the attacks of September 112001 (though lawyers and lobbyists stand to profit handsomely). This move was widely criticized by United Nations experts and some 9/11 families for its disastrous humanitarian consequences for Afghans.

On September 14, the U.S. departments of Treasury and State announced the other half of the U.S.-controlled reserves of the Afghan central bank — another $3.5 billion — would be placed under the control of a Swiss foundation called the Afghan Fund. The Afghan Fund would ​maintain its account” with the Bank for International Settlements, which is a global financial institution, based in Switzerland, that provides banking services for central banks.

Afghan men carrying a sack of flour in January as the UN World Food Program distributes monthly food rations in an area south of Kabul. Between June 2021 and July 2022, the price of wheat flour in Afghanistan skyrocketed 68%.(PHOTO BY SCOTT PETERSON/GETTY IMAGES)

According to a statement from the Bank for International Settlements, its role ​is limited to providing banking services” and it plays no part in the decision-making of the Afghan Fund.

In the short term, the Afghan Fund’s board of trustees ​will have the ability to authorize targeted disbursements to promote monetary and macroeconomic stability and benefit the Afghan people,” according to the joint statement from Treasury and State. The foundation could, for example, use the assets to pay for ​critical imports like electricity,” or to pay for ​Afghanistan’s arrears at international financial institutions to preserve their eligibility for financial support.” The Afghan Fund’s long-term goal is to return the funds to the Afghan central bank, but only if key assessments and ​counter-terrorism” controls are implemented, the statement indicates.

Some activists and members of the U.S. Congress cautiously supported the creation of the Afghan Fund, hoping it marked a step toward the United States unfreezing the assets. ​The fund has the potential to create a vital pathway to a functioning financial system, returning desperately needed assets to Afghanistan that could alleviate major price spikes of food and other essentials,” Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, wrote in a September 15 statement.

The press coverage surrounding the Afghan Fund intimated a major unlocking of the assets could be just around the corner. ​Setting up the new fund will enable the funds to flow quickly,” Kylie Atwood wrote for CNN.

But now, three months later, no money has been distributed and two of the Afghan Fund’s trustees say there is no immediate plan to return assets to the Afghan central bank.

But now, three months later, no money has been distributed and two of the Afghan Fund’s trustees say there is no immediate plan to return assets to the Afghan central bank.

Four trustees

The Afghan Fund has four trustees who make its decisions. Of the two born in Afghanistan, the first is Anwar-ul-Haq Ahady, former head of the Afghan central bank and Afghanistan’s former minister of finance. The second is Shah Mehrabi, a professor at Montgomery College in Maryland, who also serves on the Afghan central bank’s Supreme Council.

Mehrabi and Ahady each confirmed to Workday Magazine and In These Times that, in the three months since it was created, the Afghan Fund has not disbursed any funds — neither directly to the Afghan central bank, nor to meet any immediate needs for economic stabilization — and has no immediate plans to make significant disbursements to the central bank.

At the first meeting of the Afghan Fund trustees in Geneva on November 21, ​potential disbursement issues were addressed but no policy and procedures or options were elaborated or finalized,” Mehrabi explains. There is another meeting scheduled for January, he says, but ​release of these funds to the central bank most likely will not occur in January.” Ahady confirmed the Afghan Fund has not yet reached agreement on a policy to disburse funds.

According to Mehrabi and Ahady, among the trustees at the November 21 meeting was Andrew Baukol, the U.S. Treasury’s acting undersecretary for international affairs, who replaced Scott Miller, U.S. ambassador to Switzerland, as a trustee. (The U.S. Embassy in Switzerland confirmed that Miller had been replaced, and ​the U.S. representative is now based at Treasury.”) The swap-in of Baukol, who has also worked in the CIA and the U.S. office of the International Monetary Fund, suggests a larger role for the Treasury Department.

The fourth trustee is Alexandra Baumann, a Swiss foreign ministry official.

For any decision to go through, it must have the unanimous backing of the foundation’s four trustees, Ahady explains. Given the Treasury Department’s representation, ​If the U.S. government disagrees, no decision will be made,” he says.

Mehrabi’s position on the board was a win for advocates of unfreezing the Afghan central bank funds, as he is an outspoken proponent of unlocking the assets and restoring them to the central bank. Mehrabi explains over WhatsApp that he would like to see a ​limited, monitored release” of funds to the Afghan central bank, ranging from $80 million to $100 million per month, ​depending on the demand and stabilization of currency and stable prices.” (He has previously called for $150 million a month.)

Mehrabi’s proposal is relatively moderate compared with others who have issued less qualified calls to fully unfreeze the Afghan central bank assets and revive the institution. But for those who are anxious to welcome any amount of disbursement to Afghanistan’s central bank, Mehrabi stands out for supporting the direct flow of funds.

When asked whether other trustees agree the funds should be returned to the Afghan central bank, Mehrabi replies, ​The issue of disbursement has not been fully discussed yet and finalized.”

A Treasury Department readout from the November 21 meeting says the trustees of the Afghan Fund agreed on operational matters, like ​hiring an external auditor” and ​developing compliance controls and foundational corporate governance documents.” But the readout contains no mention of what will happen with the actual assets.

When asked about the prospect of unlocking the assets for the Afghan central bank, Mehrabi explains: ​The U.S. government’s position has been not to release funds to the central bank unless capacity building and AML/CFT issues [anti-money laundering and counter-financing control measures] are resolved. How long will this take? There is an immediate need to tackle higher prices that people are suffering from, and lack of funds has prevented businesses from paying for imports. If funds are not released soon, the suffering of Afghans will continue.”

Ahady says over the phone that, due to the position of the United States, the Afghan Fund will be unlikely to return any significant portion of the assets to the Afghan central bank while the Taliban ​is declining U.S. requests for more inclusive government and women’s rights.”

Some funds may be disbursed for key items that circumvent the central bank in the public interest, Ahady says, such as printing new bank notes or passports. But the primary purpose of the Afghan Fund ​is really to keep this money so that, one day, when the situation becomes normal, this is the capital of the Afghan central bank. So at least the central bank will have capital to work with. So the main idea is not so much disbursement, unless it’s strictly needed, but to manage the fund that’s under sanction.”

Ahady declined to comment on whether he supports this orientation to the frozen assets.

“There is an immediate need to tackle higher prices that people are suffering from, and lack of funds has prevented businesses from paying for imports. If funds are not released soon, the suffering of Afghans will continue.”

Such an approach would differ from the standards laid out in the joint statement from the departments of Treasury and State, which highlights three conditions for unfreezing the assets: that the central bank ​demonstrates its independence from political influence and interference”; ​demonstrates it has instituted adequate anti-money laundering and countering-the-financing-of-terrorism (AML/CFT) controls”; and ​completes a third-party needs assessment and onboards a reputable third-party monitor.”

According to Cavan Kharrazian, a progressive foreign policy advocate for Demand Progress, any delay will most greatly harm those who are already vulnerable and oppressed under Taliban rule. ​For the foreseeable future, the Taliban will be in charge of the government of Afghanistan,” Kharrazian says. ​While they have a deplorable human rights record, especially towards women, there is also a severe economic and humanitarian crisis in the country that needs immediate attention. This crisis affects the most vulnerable segments of society the worst.”

Kharrazian adds: ​The U.S. just spent 20 years and trillions of dollars attempting to eradicate and replace the Taliban and its oppressive rule. It didn’t work. But the U.S. does have the ability to facilitate the unfreezing of funds that can benefit millions of people facing humanitarian disaster in Afghanistan.”

Afghan activist Bita implores that ​the funds need to be released right now, because people are struggling. So many people lost their lives, so many people sold their kids on the streets, so many forced their daughters to marry a man because of the economic situation. So it has to be right now.”

Arauz, from the CEPR, says it would be a profound mistake on the part of the United States to withhold assets from the Afghan central bank in order to punish the Taliban. ​The central bank funds are not government funds,” he emphasizes. ​They are commingled with commercial banks’ funds, which ultimately belong to depositors, which are human beings and businesses. It would not be returning the funds to the Taliban — it would be returning funds to the commercial system and depositors of the Afghan economy.”

The clock is ticking and activists warn that each day without the unfreezing of the funds brings more hardship for Afghans. ​When the fund was created, every major humanitarian institution, the United Nations, etc., were already pretty clear that the whole country faced a giant humanitarian crisis that needed to be addressed as soon as possible,” Kharrazian says. ​There was already a sense of urgency.

They’ve waited three months to deliberate over sending small portions over what should have been fully unfrozen funds. If it was urgent in September, it’s especially urgent now, with winter arriving.”

“They’ve waited three months to deliberate over sending small portions over what should have been fully unfrozen funds. If it was urgent in September, it’s especially urgent now, with winter arriving.”

Ahady’s position is that unlocking the Afghan central bank assets would not be a magic wand. He says that ​the objective of sanctions is to make things difficult, and have these sanctions contributed to the slowdown of economic activities in Afghanistan? Yes.” But, he contends, a number of factors are to blame, including dependency on foreign assistance, the imposition of sanctions, and poor economic management. ​I think that, even if the U.S. government were to release this fund, this is not going to solve Afghanistan’s economic problems,” he says. ​It might help a little bit. Just a little bit.”

Afghan Fund trustee Baumann did not respond to a request for an interview, but she has emphasized caution in previous statements to the press. ​The [Afghan central bank], in its current form, is not a fit place for this money,” she said in an October article from SWI swiss​in​fo​.ch, a media service of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation. ​We do not have any guarantee that if the money goes back right now that it will be effectively used for the benefit of the Afghan people.”

The U.S. Treasury Department also did not return a request for comment.

With no clear timetable for disbursing funds, Erik Sperling, executive director of advocacy organization Just Foreign Policy, expresses frustration. ​Given U.S. Treasury’s continued veto and dominance over the Swiss Fund,” he says, ​U.S. officials like Janet Yellen, Adewale O. Adeyemo and, ultimately, President Biden are responsible for destroying [the Afghan] economy and knowingly plunging tens of millions of Afghans into crisis.”

According to Bita, ​The way the U.S. government has taken hostage of the funds — that is one way of dehumanizing the people of Afghanistan.”

With this money,” Bita adds, ​you could save the lives of so many people.”

This article is a joint publication of In These Times and Workday Magazine, a non-profit newsroom devoted to holding the powerful accountable through the perspective of workers.

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Pakistan Delegation to Visit Afghanistan This Week

Within the last two weeks, the Islamic Emirate and Pakistan forces have engaged in fighting twice in the Spin Boldak-Chaman crossing.

A delegation from Pakistan comprised of religious scholars and tribal elders is visiting Afghanistan this week, local officials in the Chaman area in Pakistan confirmed to TOLOnews.

The visit is expected to discuss recent tensions raised between the Islamic Emirate and Pakistani forces along the Durand Line, according to some members of the delegation.

“We are going to Afghanistan. Those in Afghanistan are our brothers. The same are the governor and other leaders. We talk to them because the (Spin Boldak-Chaman) crossing is closed often due to clashes,” said Sardar Barat, a member of the delegation.

“Those who are wounded or martyred on this side or another side, we are talking about this matter with them (the Islamic Emirate),” said Haji Abdul Shakur, a member of the delegation.

Earlier, Pakistan media reported that the delegation would consist of four members, but some members of the delegation told TOLOnews that the team includes 20 people.

Within the last two weeks, the Islamic Emirate and Pakistan forces have engaged in fighting twice in the Spin Boldak-Chaman crossing.

Analysts said that religious scholars can play a critical role in resolving tensions between the two sides.

“The situation was complicated. The officials of the two sides should held talks. Therefore, it was agreed to send a delegation comprised of religious scholars and tribal elders. The goal is to normalize the situation on the two sides,” said Tahir Khan, a Pakistani journalist.

“A permanent solution should be found for the problem so that the people of Afghanistan would not witness border problems with Pakistan in the future,” said Ajmal Sayis, a political analyst.

Officials from Kabul and Islamabad have not commented on the visit of the delegation so far.

Earlier, Pakistan sent a delegation comprised of religious scholars to mediate negotiations between the Tahrik-e-Taliban Pakistan and improve relations between the two countries.

Pakistan Delegation to Visit Afghanistan This Week
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Pakistan Delegation to Visit Afghanistan This Week

Within the last two weeks, the Islamic Emirate and Pakistan forces have engaged in fighting twice in the Spin Boldak-Chaman crossing.

A delegation from Pakistan comprised of religious scholars and tribal elders is visiting Afghanistan this week, local officials in the Chaman area in Pakistan confirmed to TOLOnews.

The visit is expected to discuss recent tensions raised between the Islamic Emirate and Pakistani forces along the Durand Line, according to some members of the delegation.

“We are going to Afghanistan. Those in Afghanistan are our brothers. The same are the governor and other leaders. We talk to them because the (Spin Boldak-Chaman) crossing is closed often due to clashes,” said Sardar Barat, a member of the delegation.

“Those who are wounded or martyred on this side or another side, we are talking about this matter with them (the Islamic Emirate),” said Haji Abdul Shakur, a member of the delegation.

Earlier, Pakistan media reported that the delegation would consist of four members, but some members of the delegation told TOLOnews that the team includes 20 people.

Within the last two weeks, the Islamic Emirate and Pakistan forces have engaged in fighting twice in the Spin Boldak-Chaman crossing.

Analysts said that religious scholars can play a critical role in resolving tensions between the two sides.

“The situation was complicated. The officials of the two sides should held talks. Therefore, it was agreed to send a delegation comprised of religious scholars and tribal elders. The goal is to normalize the situation on the two sides,” said Tahir Khan, a Pakistani journalist.

“A permanent solution should be found for the problem so that the people of Afghanistan would not witness border problems with Pakistan in the future,” said Ajmal Sayis, a political analyst.

Officials from Kabul and Islamabad have not commented on the visit of the delegation so far.

Earlier, Pakistan sent a delegation comprised of religious scholars to mediate negotiations between the Tahrik-e-Taliban Pakistan and improve relations between the two countries.

Pakistan Delegation to Visit Afghanistan This Week
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Polio Vaccination Campaign Begins in 26 Provinces

The Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) said that seven million children will be vaccinated in this campaign.

The polio vaccination campaign kicked off in 26 provinces of the country, including the capital city, Kabul, on Monday.

The Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) said that seven million children will be vaccinated in this campaign.

According to MoPH statistics, two positive polio cases have been registered this year.

It will be the last phase of the polio vaccination campaign in the country for this year.

“The campaign will continue for four days and at least seven million children will be vaccinated in 26 provinces of the country,” said Sharafat Zaman Amerkhail, a spokesman for the MoPH.

Kabul residents welcomed the campaign and said they were ready to cooperate.

“We are happy with the polio vaccination campaign and we are ready to implement it for our children,” said Parwiz, a Kabul resident.

“We are happy from the Ministry of Public Health that it vaccinates our children and prevents them from being paralyzed,” said Abdul Majeed, a resident of Kabul.

Polio vaccination campaign workers asked Kabul residents to cooperate with them in the process. They said that children should be vaccinated every three months to be protected against poliovirus.

“It is a dangerous disease. It is a viral disease that paralyzes the body. It majorly affects children under the age of five,” said Asma, a vaccinator.

“I call on families that when we go to their houses, they should bring their children for the vaccination and they should cooperate with us,” said Zarmina, a vaccinator.

Figures by the Ministry of Public Health show that four positive cases of polio were recorded in the country last year. In 2020, it was 56 positive cases in Afghanistan.

Polio Vaccination Campaign Begins in 26 Provinces
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Karzai Meets Exiled Politicians in Germany, Turkey

But the Islamic Emirate said that Karzai does not represent the Islamic Emirate in his meetings with the politicians.

Former President Hamid Karzai held meetings with a number of former Afghan officials and politicians in Germany and Turkey.

Shahzada Massoud, a close aide to Karzai, said the former president during his meetings discussed the start of intra-Afghan negotiations and ways to unify the people.

“He is currently in Turkey and has met a lot of Afghans. These meetings will continue tomorrow as well,” Massoud said. “The biggest goal of the meetings is to achieve enduring peace and stability in Afghanistan.”

“Mr. Karzai has come to Istanbul. We had a meeting with him. Almost all Afghans have gathered for welcoming him,” said Abdul Shakur Dadras, a close aide to Karzai.

But the Islamic Emirate said that Karzai does not represent the Islamic Emirate in his meetings with the politicians.

“It is mainly referred back to himself. He is not there to represent the Islamic Emirate and he is neither an official. Also, we have no objections to these meetings because Afghans need to meet each other,” an Islamic Emirate spokesman said.

Karzai also visited the UAE ahead of his trip to Germany and Turkey.

“It is aimed at meeting his former colleagues and friends. Everyone, including Hamid Karzai, knows that no role is seen for the former figures in a near future in Afghanistan,” said Torek Farhadi, a political analyst.

On December 3, Karzai traveled to the UAE, where he met with Thomas West, the US special envoy for Afghanistan.

Karzai Meets Exiled Politicians in Germany, Turkey
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At least 12 killed in accident in Afghanistan’s Salang Tunnel

Al Jazeera

At least 12 people were killed in an accident in the Salang Tunnel, which connects Afghanistan’s capital Kabul to its north, the authorities have said.

Thirty-seven people were injured on Saturday after a fuel tanker caught fire, said Molvi Hamiddullah Misbah, a spokesperson for the Public Works Ministry.

While the fire had been extinguished, Misbah said on Sunday that the death toll was likely to rise. The cause of the accident remained unclear.

“When we went inside the tunnel in the morning, we saw bodies that were not recognisable, as they were severely burnt. Women, men and children were among them,” Ajab Gul, an eyewitness, told the Afghan Tolo news agency.

The landmark tunnel is located about 90km (56 miles) north of Kabul and is a key link between the country’s north and south.

Military helicopters along with medics and first aid teams were sent to the scene, the Defence Ministry posted on social media.

Abdullah Afghan Mal, a senior health official in Parwan province, said many of the dead included women and children whose bodies were badly burnt. “Among the dead it was very hard to identify who was a male and who was a female,” he told the AFP news agency.

The 2.6-km (1.6-mile) long Soviet-built tunnel is an engineering feat that links Kabul and Afghanistan’s north, connecting the Indian subcontinent to Central Asia through the treacherous Salang pass, one of the highest mountain highways in the world at about 3,650 metres (12,000 feet).

The pass is often shut for days because of accidents, heavy snowfall and avalanches during the winter months.

In 2010, avalanches killed more than 150 people in the Salang pass.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
At least 12 killed in accident in Afghanistan’s Salang Tunnel
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