UN Highlights Afghanistan’s Situation in Quarterly Report

The UN has transferred $1.63 billion in cash between December 1 2021 and November 2022, the report says.

The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres released his latest quarterly report on Afghanistan in which he highlights economic, humanitarian and political situation as well as the condition of human and women’ rights in the country.

The report says there is some progress regarding connectivity, trade and transit, including the signature on of a contract for air traffic control with an UAE company for several international airports.

The UN Secretary General lists the economic progress as follows:
-     “The announcement on 10 September of a quadripartite agreement to pilot a railway and road trade corridor connecting Afghanistan to China via Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
-     “The announcement on 27 September of imports of gasoline, diesel fuel, liquefied petroleum gas and wheat from the Russian Federation at advantageous prices.
-     “On 4 October the extension until March 2023 by the Islamic Republic of Iran of the gasoline transit permit. 31.
-     “The de facto authorities regularly engaged with China on the inclusion of Afghanistan in the belt and road initiative and with Turkmenistan on the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline.
-     “On 10 October, the de facto authorities reported that agreements had been reached with Turkmenistan on several issues, including a schedule for land acquisition and pipeline construction, and gas distribution to industrial parks and residents in Herat.
-     “On 2 November, in a joint statement, China and Pakistan conveyed consensus on the need to continue their humanitarian and economic assistance for the Afghan people and enhance development cooperation in Afghanistan, including through its inclusion in the China – Pakistan Economic Corridor.
-     “On 25 October, the de facto authorities also inaugurated the Mazar-e Sharif International Airport, reconstructed with financial and technical assistance from Uzbekistan.”

But the report calls the reduction in development aid, international financial transactions challenges, the impact on the banking sector and skilled workforce shortages as the most factors adversely affecting the economy since August 2021.

“Exports to India and Pakistan are higher than in the previous year, while essential commodity prices have stabilized, and in some cases declined – possibly owing in part to imports from the Russian Federation,” the report reads.

According to the report, most Afghans remain impoverished with little prospect of meaningful improvement as over 90 per cent of the population is estimated to be food insecure.

The UN has transferred $1.63 billion in cash between December 1 2021 and November 2022, the report says.

“The funds were distributed directly to 19 different United Nations agencies, funds or programmes, the World Bank and 30 international non-governmental organizations through the Afghanistan International Bank,” the report said. “The cash delivery continued to contribute to stabilizing the Afghan currency and serve as an economic stimulus without directly supporting the de facto administration.”

About political situation in Afghanistan, the report says the “political opposition, comprising exiled former Republic officials and political figures, continued to meet and issue statements.”

“Amid those developments, the de facto authorities increased engagement with political figures based in Afghanistan and continued efforts to attract the re turn of exiled Afghans through the Commission for Return and Communication with Former Afghan Officials and Political Figures,” the report said. “Senior de facto officials met Republic -era personalities, including, in October, former parliamentarians, some of whom were returnees, along with former politicians and their cadres.”

Regarding the conditions of human rights, the report said that the “de facto authorities continued to curtail Afghans’ rights to freedom of opinion, expression and peaceful assembly.”

Guterres said that in August and September, the UNAMA and UN-Women convened 15 in-country and online consultations in 12 provinces with 207 Afghan women leaders with diverse personal and professional backgrounds.

“They unanimously emphasized the reopening of secondary girls’ schools as the most immediate priority, followed by safety and security (flagged by 71 per cent of participants), and asked the international community to focus on reinstating the full spectrum of rights for women and girls, beyond education,” he added.

UN Highlights Afghanistan’s Situation in Quarterly Report
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UN postpones decision on ambassadors from Myanmar, Taliban, Libya

Al Jazeera

The United Nations General Assembly has approved postponing its decision on whether Myanmar’s military government and Afghanistan’s Taliban leaders can send ambassadors to the UN in New York, with the assembly also deferring its decision on rival claims to Libya’s UN seat.

The 193-member General Assembly approved by consensus a recommendation by its Credentials Committee to delay the vote on the matters on Friday.

The postponement means the current envoys of Myanmar, Afghanistan and Libya remain in place.

“The committee decided to postpone its consideration of the credentials pertaining to the representatives of Myanmar, Afghanistan and of Libya,” said Guyana’s UN ambassador Carolyn Rodrigues-Birkett, who chairs the credentials committee.

The vote could now be postponed to a future date in the ongoing 77th session of the General Assembly, which expires in September 2023.

UN acceptance of ambassadors from Myanmar’s military government, the Taliban in Kabul, and Libya’s eastern-backed government would act as the first step towards their official recognition on the global stage.

Myanmar’s military rulers have been attempting to fill the country’s UN seat since the country’s democratically elected leader Aung Suu Kyi was removed from power and later imprisoned following a military coup last year.

The General Assembly’s decision will keep Kyaw Moe Tun, a diplomat of Aung San Suu Kyi’s former government, in his seat.

Chris Gunness, director for the Myanmar Accountability Project (MAP), called the decision on Friday an “important move which has great diplomatic and symbolic significance, at a time when the illegal coup leaders are attempting to gain international recognition”.

Afghanistan’s seat will continue to be held by officials under the nation’s former government of President Ashraf Ghani, who was removed by the Taliban in 2021 after United States and NATO forces withdrew from the country.

The Taliban had pledged to uphold the rights of girls and women when it seized power, however, authorities in Kabul have instead banned secondary education for girls and put restrictions on work and dress codes for women.

The Taliban have also recently overseen Afghanistan’s first public execution since their return to power.

Libya’s UN ambassador, Taher El Sonni, is also expected to stay on in his current capacity as envoy for the western Tripoli-based Libyan government. The oil-rich country has been in turmoil since a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, which ended with the killing of the country’s longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi.

Libya was again engulfed in a political crisis in 2021 after it neglected to hold a long-anticipated election, splitting the country into two rival factions – in the country’s east and west. A transitional Tripoli government later rejected calls to resign and the country’s eastern-based leadership ultimately appointed a rival prime minister who had intended to take over the UN seat.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
UN postpones decision on ambassadors from Myanmar, Taliban, Libya
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Former US ambassadors push for help for Afghan allies in spending bill

Anchor and Chief Washington Correspondent
CNN

CNN — 

A group of retired ambassadors, all of whom served as chief of mission at the US Embassy in Afghanistan, have written a letter to congressional leaders pushing them to include the Afghan Adjustment Act in the omnibus spending bill.

The legislation “keeps our deep and binding commitments we made to our wartime allies. This is a moral imperative but also ensures we will find future allies in conflicts to come,” former ambassadors Ryan Crocker, Ronald E. Neumann, William Wood, Earl Anthony Wayne, James Cunningham, P. Michael McKinley, Hugo Llorens and Ross Wilson write in the letter being sent Wednesday evening.

The letter, organized by AfghanEvac’s Shawn vanDiver and former ambassador Phil Kosnett, stands as a message from respected leaders and experts on Afghanistan that including the bill in the omnibus spending package is essential to meeting the United States’ obligations.

The push comes after top congressional negotiators announced Tuesday evening that an agreement had been reached for a framework that should allow lawmakers to complete a sweeping full-year government funding package. With an outline agreed upon, staff will spend the next several days drafting the legislation and dolling out millions of dollars to agencies.

The letter argues that without the Afghan Adjustment Act, the asylum and immigration court systems will be “overwhelmed with thousands of new requests as parole begins to expire for those Afghans who were brought here during the August 2021 evacuation.”

“Without an AAA, tens of thousands of recently arrived Afghans will have to find an existing immigration pathway to remain lawful once their parole expires,” the letter states. “That will mean tens of thousands of new asylum claims.”

The group of retired diplomats added that the task of American diplomacy will be more difficult without the legislative provisions outlined in the bill.

“If the United States does not act to support its allies by passing the Afghan Adjustment Act, in the future our allies will be less likely to support the US missions if they see that our Afghan partners are abandoned,” the letter said.

Congress is on track to pass a week-long extension to avert a shutdown by Friday, but a broader funding deal had been challenging amid a dispute between the two parties over how much money should be spent on non-defense, domestic priorities.

Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell said on Tuesday that an agreement on spending needs to be finished no later than December 22, noting that lawmakers “intend to be on the road going home” on December 23 ahead of the Christmas holiday.

CNN’s Sonnet Swire contributed to this report.

Former US ambassadors push for help for Afghan allies in spending bill
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Afghan journalists tell London court Britain has “betrayed debt of gratitude”

Sam Tobin

LONDON, Dec 15 (Reuters) – Eight Afghan journalists who worked for the BBC and other British media organisations are challenging the British government’s refusal to relocate them, arguing that they are at high risk of being killed by Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers.

The journalists “worked alongside and in support of the British government’s mission” in Afghanistan and put their lives at risk, their lawyers told London’s High Court on Thursday.

Adam Straw said the British government has “betrayed the debt of gratitude” owed to his clients by refusing to relocate them or allow them to enter the country after the Taliban took over Afghanistan in August 2021. None of the eight are in Britain, the court heard.

He added in written arguments that the Ministry of Defence’s decision that the journalists were not eligible under the government’s Afghan Relocation and Assistance Policy (ARAP) programme was unlawful.

The journalists “were activists against the Taliban and participated in [government] media freedom campaigns, notwithstanding that they worked for independent bodies,” Straw said.

The government’s lawyer David Blundell said in court documents that the BBC had written to the government on behalf of around 170 members of its staff to ask for help in leaving Afghanistan, but did not identify any of the eight journalists.

He added that all the eight journalists’ applications under the ARAP programme were refused because they were not eligible for relocation under the policy.

Blundell also said the government was right to conclude the journalists had not “worked alongside, in partnership with, or closely supporting a government department” because the BBC is independent of the government.

British troops were involved in Afghanistan from the U.S.-led invasion in 2001 that overthrew the Taliban until August 2021, when the hardline Islamist group swept back into the capital, forcing a hurried evacuation which saw more than 120,000 people airlifted from Kabul but many others left behind.

Reporting by Sam Tobin; Editing by Angus MacSwan
Afghan journalists tell London court Britain has “betrayed debt of gratitude”
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Afghan Refugees’ Needs Addressed at Quadrilateral Meeting in Iran

Meanwhile, the deputy spokesman for the Islamic Emirate said that those who went abroad need to return and build their country.

Abdul Mutalib Haqqani, a spokesman for the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation, said that at the “Quadrilateral Meeting” officials from Kabul, representatives of Iran, Pakistan, and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, discussed the need to avoid bad behavior against Afghan refugees.    

In the past year, various reports have been published about the bad behavior against Afghan refugees in neighboring countries.

“Regarding those Afghan refugees that want to return to the country, in this meeting, the creation of a mechanism for their voluntary return was also discussed,” said Abdul Mutalib Haqqani, a spokesman for the Ministry of Refugee and Repatriation.

“The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has to make a plan for reestablishing immigrants’ employment and livelihoods,” said Tariq Farhadi, a political analyst.

Meanwhile, the deputy spokesman for the Islamic Emirate said that those who went abroad need to return and build their country.

“The Islamic Emirate asked those who went to other countries to come back to their country and build their country,” said Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesman for the Islamic Emirate.

Some analysts believe that if work opportunities are provided for the young they will return to their country.

“Those refugees that return to their country should have work so that they do not have to leave the country again,” said Idris Mohammad Zazai, a political analyst.

“Since the last changes in the country, the young generation leaves the country to Iran and Pakistan,” said Asifa Stanikzai, a refugee rights activist in Iran.

Afghan immigrants in regional countries, especially Iran, Pakistan, and Turkey, are living in difficult conditions.

Afghan Refugees’ Needs Addressed at Quadrilateral Meeting in Iran
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Civilians wounded as fighting erupts at Pakistan-Afghan border

Al Jazeera

At least 16 Pakistanis injured in the city of Chaman

Islamabad, Pakistan – At least 16 Pakistani civilians have been wounded as fighting broke out between Pakistani and Afghan border forces for the second time in less than a week, a Pakistani medical official says.

An emergency was declared on Thursday at the main hospital in the Pakistani city of Chaman after heavy artillery firing started around midday (07:00 GMT) near the Chaman-Spin Boldak border crossing, Dr Akhtar Mohammed, an official at the hospital, told Al Jazeera.

“Four civilians were in critical condition, and they have been sent to Quetta for further treatment,” he said, adding that two children were among the wounded. “No dead bodies were brought to hospital so far.”

Pakistani military officials alleged “indiscriminate firing” was directed from the Afghan side of the border towards civilian areas of Chaman.

Chaman authorities told Al Jazeera that markets near the border have shut down and a tense calm has fallen over the city.

The Afghan Ministry of Defence alleged that Pakistani forces had opened fire first.

In a statement on Twitter, the ministry said the Kabul government believes dialogue is the way forward.

At least nine Pakistani civilians were killed on Sunday in a skirmish between the two countries near the same border crossing, which connects Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan to Afghanistan’s southeastern Kandahar province.

The Pakistani military accused the Afghan authorities of opening “unprovoked and indiscriminate” fire.

Pakistani Defence Minister Khwaja Mohammed Asif told parliament on Monday that Afghan authorities had “apologised” for Sunday’s incident and said it wouldn’t be repeated.

Asif had alleged that a “provocation was started by Afghanistan” when Pakistan’s border forces were repairing the border fence.

Kabul also said any repetition of Sunday’s incident would be “regrettable”.

The Chaman border crossing is almost 120km (74 miles) northwest of Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province. It is one of the busiest crossings between the two countries and a key trade route.

The border was closed for a week last month when a Pakistani security official was shot dead there by an unknown gunman.

Since the Afghan Taliban took over Afghanistan in August last year, relations between the two neighbours have been tense.

Pakistan has accused Afghanistan of harbouring the armed group Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an offshoot of the Afghan Taliban.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA
Civilians wounded as fighting erupts at Pakistan-Afghan border
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‘Majority of Displaced Populations in Afghanistan’ Are Women: UN

The World Food Program in Afghanistan (WFP) said that it has been providing assistance to women across the country.

The UN Women in Afghanistan said that “women make-up the majority of the displaced populations in Afghanistan. The inability to exercise property rights or seek legal help means women in informal settlements live every day in fear of being evicted.”

“Women and girls are affected by negative coping mechanisms due to lack of food. Women are forced to sell their assets to buy food, or, in most extreme cases, families have to sell their girls for marriage,” UN women in Afghanistan said on Twitter.

TOLOnews’ reached out to vulnerable women who are struggling to meet basic needs.

Shah Jan said that she was forced to sell several house items to make ends meet.

“We have sold the home belongings. We had an old carpet and we sold it to provide for our expenses. We have food for lunch, we are worried about dinner,” she said.

“We have no wood for heating, no coal. We call on the government to provide us with aid,” said Hameeda, a vulnerable woman.

The World Food Program in Afghanistan (WFP) said that it has been providing assistance to women across the country.

“Afghan women are currently faced with an economic crisis and a lack of jobs.

‘Majority of Displaced Populations in Afghanistan’ Are Women: UN
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After Recent Attacks, MoI Pledges to Take Strict Security Measures

According to the spokesman of the Interior Ministry, security measures will be increased in diplomatic areas.

After the attack on the hotel in Kabul, in which Chinese nationals were injured, the Ministry of Interior Affairs said it is taking strict security measures to ensure the security of diplomatic institutions.

According to the spokesman of the Interior Ministry, security measures will be increased in diplomatic areas.

“To avoid terrorist attacks, the Ministry of Interior is taking strict security measures in diplomatic areas,” said Abdul Nafi Takoor, spokesman for the Ministry of Interior Affairs.

In the last several months, there have been attacks on diplomatic institutions such as the Pakistan embassy in Kabul. The most recent attack injured Chinese nationals.

“They don’t want Afghanistan to have good relations with other countries,” said Hekmatullah Hekmat, a military analyst.

“If the Taliban want to avoid these kinds of attacks, they have to maintain balance in their political interactions with foreign countries,” said Asadullah Nadeem, a military analyst.

It has been more than a year that the Islamic Emirate has not been recognized by any country, but there are embassies of China, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Iran, Russia, the United Arab Emirates and offices of the European Union and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

After Recent Attacks, MoI Pledges to Take Strict Security Measures
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Taliban official: 20 men lashed in public in Afghanistan

RAHIM FAIEZ

Associated Press
14 Dec 2022

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Twenty people were lashed in public on Wednesday in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan as punishment for alleged adultery, theft, and other crimes, a provincial official said.

Afghanistan’s new authorities have set hardline policies since they took over the country in August 2021 that reflect their interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia.

Mohammad Qasim Riyaz, a Taliban-appointed spokesman for the governor’s office in southern Helmand province, said the lashings took place at the sports stadium in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand.

Riyaz said each man was lashed between 35 to 39 times, and the punishments were carried out before provincial Taliban officials, religious clerics, elders and local people.

An unspecified number of those punished also received prison terms according to their crimes., Riyaz said.

Wednesday’s lashings in Helmand come a week after the Taliban authorities executed an Afghan convicted of killing another man, the first public execution since the former insurgents returned to power last year.

The execution, carried out with an assault rifle by the victim’s father, took place in western Farah province before hundreds of spectators and many top Taliban officials, according to Zabihullah Mujahid, the top government spokesman. Some officials came from the capital of Kabul.

The execution drew international criticism. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said “the death penalty cannot be reconciled with full respect for the right to life,” spokeswoman Stephanie Tremblay said.

In comments last week, State Department spokesman Ned Price said the U.S. condemned the public execution. Price said the Taliban’s future relationship with Washington depended “largely on their actions when it comes to human rights.”

No foreign state has officially recognized the Taliban government that took over as U.S. and NATO troops withdrew last year. The Taliban formerly ruled Afghanistan before the U.S. invasion of 2001.

Taliban official: 20 men lashed in public in Afghanistan
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Visa Program for Afghans Who Helped US Military in Danger of Lapsing After Exclusion from Defense Bill

Military.com
12 December 2022
Afghan evacuees leave a U.S. C-17 Globemaster.
Afghan evacuees leave a U.S. C-17 Globemaster after arriving at Ali Al Salem Air Base, Kuwait, August 26, 2021. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Brooks)

The program that grants visas to Afghans who helped the U.S. military during the United States’ longest war is at risk of ending next year after an extension was left out of the annual defense policy bill.

The Special Immigrant Visa, or SIV, program has been included in the National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, in recent years. But the compromise version of this year’s defense policy bill that is expected to become law this month left out a one-year extension that had been included in prior iterations.

Visa Program for Afghans Who Helped US Military in Danger of Lapsing After Exclusion from Defense Bill
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