Over 300 Former Govt Officials, Traders Returned to Country: Commission

Some senior former government officials have returned to the country over the past several weeks.

The “Commission for the Return and Communications with Former Afghan Officials and Political Figures” said that over 300 officials of the former government and traders have returned to the country within the past four months.

A spokesman for the commission, Ahmadullah Wasiq, acknowledged that some of the officials who returned to the country have left the country again but said that their leaving was due to personal issues.

There are reports that some of the former government officials, including Dawlat Waziri, the former Defense Ministry spokesman, Amanullah Ghalib, former head of the Breshna Shirkat, and Kamal Nasir Osuli, former member of the parliament, have returned to the country and then left again.

“Hundreds of them have received the forms to return to the country. I don’t think it is necessary to publicize their names before their arrival. We are in contact with them, some of them left the country for treatment or to transfer their families,” Wassiq said.

However, some senior former government officials have returned to the country over the past several weeks.

“There is a need for more work to be done. It (Islamic Emirate) should make contact with more people and ask for cooperation from other people, other tribes in the country, thus a reconciliation path will be laid,” said Amanullah Hotaki, a political analyst.

“Some certain people returned but some others have not returned and the actions of the commission have not been very noticeable in the country. There was no representative and no plan or roadmap of how the individuals can return,” said Rahamatullah Bizhanpor, a political analyst.

According to Wassiq, the cases of the former government will be addressed based on the procedures of the commission and if they are accused of corruption by the former government they will be granted amnesty based on the decree of the supreme leader of the Islamic Emirate.

Over 300 Former Govt Officials, Traders Returned to Country: Commission
read more

Closing of Girls’ Schools Sparks Continued Criticism

She said that Afghanistan is the only country where girls can’t go to school. 

Norway’s ambassador and permanent representative to the UN, Tine Mørch Smith, expressed criticism toward the closure of girls’ school above grade six in Afghanistan.

She said that Afghanistan is the only country where girls can’t go to school.

“One year after the Taliban takeover the situation for women and girls has deteriorated on a shocking scale … one grim example, is that Afghanistan is now the only nation in the world that forbids girls’ education. Almost one year has passed since Taliban banned teenage girls from schools,” she told a press conference.

Addressing the same press conference, the human rights activist Najiba Sanjar expressed concerns over deprivation of Afghan girls from their basic rights.

“The schools are closed, women are unemployed, family violence and femicide have increased. Fifty-seven percent of Afghan women are married before the age of 19, women-led organizations and human rights organization are shut down and others continue to face hundreds of restrictions every day,” Sanjar said.

Meanwhile, the Public Health Minister, Qalindar Ibad that the said Islamic Emarat is not against the education of girls and these schools will not be closed for ever.

“There is a mechanism underway regarding the girls’ school. The Islamic Emirate has never issued a decisive order that the schools will not be reopened,” Ibad said.

This comes as students expressed frustration, saying that they have been faded up with the promises.

“All of the summits held by the UN are at the level of tweets and there are no practical steps in this regard,” said Samina, a student.

“I have three daughters. They are in grades 10, 11 and 12. They are now suffering from mental pressure and when I see them, it affects me as well,” said Hamira, a student.

Earlier, the acting education minister Noorullah Munir claimed that people did not want their girls to attend school in the current situation.

Closing of Girls’ Schools Sparks Continued Criticism
read more

Restrictions Will Cause Distance Between Kabul, World: Islamic Emirate

This comes as the UNSC has yet to decide whether to extend or end the travel ban exemption for 13 members of the Islamic Emirate.

The Islamic Emirate’s Political Office in Qatar said that the imposition of restrictions and pressure have not had any result over the past 20 years and will only create distance between Kabul and the international community.

The head of the office, Suhail Shaheen, called on the UN Security Council to pursue negotiations and diplomacy regarding Afghanistan.

“There should be no restriction on traveling nor should these restrictions be used as pressure, because it has not had any result before and will not have any result now,” he told TOLOnews.

This comes as the UNSC has yet to decide whether to extend or end the travel ban exemption for 13 members of the Islamic Emirate.

“The sanctions and the blacklists, they are all problematic. It causes further distance, which should be closed instead. It is important to end the issue of sanctions and blacklists,” said Bilal Karimi, deputy spokesman for the Islamic Emirate.

Meanwhile, analysts said they believe that imposed restrictions on travel for Islamic Emirate members will sideline Afghanistan.

“If the travel ban exemption of the Taliban officials is not extended, I believe that the political and economic situation will deteriorate,” said Ahmad Khan Andar, a political analyst.

To recognize the government of the Islamic Emirate, the international community has put the formation of an inclusive government, upholding of human rights and women’s rights, and the prevention of the use of Afghan soil against other countries by terrorists, as conditions.

Meanwhile, the Islamic Emirate stressed the need to release Afghan foreign assets and remove its members from the UNSC’s blacklist.

Restrictions Will Cause Distance Between Kabul, World: Islamic Emirate
read more

UN expert decries ‘systematic’ attacks on Afghan Shia groups

Al Jazeera

Published on 12 September 2022

A UN expert warns that Hazaras and other Shia communities in Afghanistan are facing ‘systematic’ attacks that may amount to international crimes.

Hazara and other Shia Muslim communities in Afghanistan are facing what seem to be “systematic” attacks that could amount to international crimes, a United Nations expert has warned.

Afghanistan’s Hazaras have faced decades of abuse and state-sponsored discrimination, including by the ruling Taliban, which first ran the country from 1996 to 2001 and then seized power again in August last year.

Richard Bennett, the special rapporteur on the human rights situation in Afghanistan, said on Monday Hazara and other groups have been “arbitrary arrested, tortured, summarily executed, displaced from traditional lands, subjected to discriminatory taxation and otherwise marginalised”.

They are also the frequent target of attacks, including by the Taliban’s enemy, the Islamic State of Khorasan Province, ISKP (ISIS-K), which considers them heretics.

“These attacks appear to be systematic in nature and reflect elements of an organisational policy,” Bennett said as he presented his first report to the UN Human Rights Council.

He added the attacks bear the “hallmarks of international crimes and need to be fully investigated”. International crimes refer to war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

Last month, United States-based rights group Human Rights Watch said the Taliban has failed to protect the Hazaras and other at-risk communities in Afghanistan, undermining the armed group’s promise of greater security.

Since the Taliban’s return to power, the ISKP has claimed responsibility for 13 attacks against Hazaras and has been linked to at least three more, killing and wounding at least 700 people, the rights group said.

‘Human rights crisis’

Bennett, who began his work in May, warned the rights situation in the country has deteriorated across the board.

“Afghans are trapped in a human rights crisis that the world has seemed powerless to address,” he said.

Women and girls in particular have seen a “staggering regression” in their civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights since the Taliban came to power, he said.

“There’s no country in the world where women and girls have so rapidly been deprived of their fundamental human rights purely because of gender.”

The overall humanitarian situation was dire, with nearly half the population facing acute levels of food shortage, he added.

“Children in particular are facing extreme hunger and high risks of exploitation, including forced labour and marriage,” he said.

Despite an amnesty, people who served in the Afghan army, security forces and Western-backed government prior to the Taliban takeover in August 2021, still faced “arbitrary detention, torture, extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances”, he said.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
UN expert decries ‘systematic’ attacks on Afghan Shia groups
read more

Exclusive: Canada agrees to resettle Afghans held in UAE facility

Reuters
September 9, 2022
  • Canada agrees to U.S. request, sources say
  • Afghans held in UAE for months
  • UAE does not resettle refugees

DUBAI/WASHINGTON, Sept 8 (Reuters) – Canada will accept some 1,000 Afghans who fled the Taliban takeover of their homeland and have been held for months in a makeshift refugee centre in the United Arab Emirates awaiting resettlement to the United States and elsewhere, seven sources said.

Ottawa has agreed to a U.S. request to resettle some of the 5,000 Afghans still in Emirates Humanitarian City in Abu Dhabi, the sources said, and Canadian officials were now reviewing cases to identify those who meet Ottawa’s resettlement criteria.

It is the first known occasion of Afghans in the facility being resettled to a country to which they do not have direct ties with, such as by having worked with their government in Afghanistan.

Canada’s criteria for resettlement of those from the facility include religious minorities, single women, civil servants, social activists and journalists, the sources said.

Beyond the 1,000 people that Canada is taking at the request of the United States, Ottawa is also expected to take roughly a further 500 Afghans from the facility who do have ties to Canada, the sources said.

“It is happening,” said a U.S. source, who asked not to be further identified, confirming the Canadian resettlement operation expected to begin this month and end in October.

Asked about the arrangement, the Canadian embassy in Abu Dhabi shared an immigration department statement saying Ottawa’s priority was to support vulnerable Afghans getting to Canada.

Emirati authorities and the U.S. Embassy in Abu Dhabi did not respond to requests for comment.

Mohammad, who said he was a legal adviser to U.S. government projects in Afghanistan, told Reuters from the facility that he had applied with his family for Canadian resettlement because the processing of their U.S. Special Immigration Visa applications has taken so long.

“Because of the delays, we decided to put our names on the list,” Mohammad said in a telephone interview on the condition that his last name be withheld. Like other Afghans there, he described the conditions in the facility as similar to “jail”.

“We have no freedom. We cannot go anywhere.”

Mohammad and his family are Hazaras, an ethnic minority that is overwhelmingly Shi’ite Muslim.

Canada’s decision to accept the Afghans brings the temporary refugee centre closer to closing, though sources said there was about another 1,000 who were not eligible to be relocated to the United States and would need resettlement elsewhere.

The UAE, a close security partner of the United States, last year agreed to temporarily house several thousand Afghans evacuated from Kabul as the Taliban ousted the U.S.-backed government during the final stages of the U.S.-led withdrawal.

More than 10,000 have since been relocated from the facility to the United States, while others were resettled to nations to which they had ties such as through working with their government in Afghanistan.

Protests have sporadically broken out at the facility, including last month, over what Afghans complain is a lack of communication and transparency of the resettlement process. There has been at least one suicide attempt, according to sources and Afghans in the centre.

The Canadian immigration department statement said Ottawa plans to resettle at least 40,000 vulnerable Afghans to Canada by 2024. More than 17,650 had been resettled, it added.

Like other Gulf states, the UAE is not a signatory to the 1951 U.N. Refugee Convention and typically does not accept refugees. Foreign diplomats said some Afghans had rejected job offers in the UAE as there was no clear pathway to citizenship.

U.S. officials have said no one would be forcibly returned to Afghanistan and that Washington was working with the UAE and other nations to find “resettlement options” for those Afghans ineligible for resettlement in the United States.

The United States has so far taken in more than 85,000 Afghans since August 2021.

Exclusive: Canada agrees to resettle Afghans held in UAE facility
read more

Hundreds of Hazaras killed by ISKP since Taliban took power, say rights group

The Guardian

Tue 6 Sep 2022

Hazara communities in Afghanistan are being targeted in violent attacks by the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), Islamic State’s affiliate in Afghanistan, with more than 700 people killed in 13 attacks in the past year, according to a report by Human Rights Watch.

In the report, Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused the Taliban of doing little to protect Hazara and other religious minorities from suicide bombings and deadly attacks, and failing to provide adequate medical care and assistance to victims and their families, despite pledging to do so when they took power in August 2021.

Taliban spokesperson said that the government had taken the “necessary measures” to protect the Hazara and that the report did not reflect the reality on the ground.

The ISKP have been behind attacks on Hazara mosques, schools, and workplaces across Afghanistan, said HRW.

“The issue isn’t that the Taliban is responsible for the violence. They’re responsible for not providing adequate security to their own people,” said John Sifton, Asia advocacy director at HRW. “If they’re going to act as the governing authorities, their first priority should be protecting their own people from violence by this insurgent group.”

The Hazara, a predominantly Shia Muslim ethnic minority group in Afghanistan, have been historically persecuted by the Taliban and other groups.

Sifton said that while the new Taliban government has become comparatively more accepting of the Hazara and other religious minorities, the ISKP, who have been rapidly gaining power in some areas of the country, continue to view all Shia groups as heretics and “enemies of Islam”.

On 19 April, six people were killed and least 20 injured in a suicide bomb attack at Abdul Rahim Shahid high school in west Kabul. “There were dead bodies everywhere,” said a survivor.

Two days later, 31 people were killed and 87 injured when ISKP bombed Seh Dokan mosque in Mazar-e Sharif, one of Afghanistan’s largest Shia mosques, which has now shut down.

Later that month, 14 people were killed and 13 injured in multiple attacks targeting Hazara at their workplaces and in public in Samangan province and in Mazar-e Sharif city.

In Kabul, 120 people were killed and injured on 7 August while celebrating the Shia holiday of Ashura, UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan reported.

The ISKP attacks on Hazara and other Shia and Sufi communities have become more systematic, Richard Bennett, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan, said in May. He added that they reflect “elements of an organisational policy” and bear “hallmarks of crimes against humanity”.

Taliban troops continue to fight ISKP forces, however no security measures have been implemented to protect Hazara from further attacks, Human Rights Watch said.

“We are not contesting that the Taliban is fighting ISKP. We’re simply asking that they do more to protect the community that is most at risk,” said Sifton.

The attacks have also effectively excluded Hazara from participating in public life, practising their religion or accessing education. “Most of my classmates have stopped attending school after the tragedy,” said an 18-year-old survivor of the Abdul Rahim Shahid high school bombing. “When the Taliban took power, instead of a class of 50, there were only 25. Now, only 10 to 15 kids are attending classes.”

One of his injured classmates is determined to return to school, but bullet shards in his feet have made it difficult to walk even a short distance. “If I am supposed to die, I will die, but so long as I am alive, I will go to school,” he said.

A Taliban spokesperson said: “As per the current government policy, all Afghans are equal in the sight of the law; there is no discrimination. The government has taken necessary measures for the security of Hazara and they are free to perform their rituals. Some individual incidents have taken place in all mosques, whether they belonged to Sunni Muslims or Shias. The Human Rights Watch should correct its report; it doesn’t reflect ground realities.”

Hundreds of Hazaras killed by ISKP since Taliban took power, say rights group
read more

Education Minister’s Remarks Trigger Strong Reactions

Special envoy for Afghan women, girls, and human rights Rina Amiri tweeted in response

The remarks of the education minister regarding girls’ schooling has faced a strong reaction inside and outside Afghanistan.  

In a visit to Uruzgan province, the, acting Minister of Education, Noorullah Munir, said that people do not want their girls to attend school in the current situation.

His remarks sparked reactions among Afghans as well as on social media.

“All of Afghanistan cannot be represented by 5,10 or 15 people,” said Zubaidullah, a resident of Uruzgan.

“The remarks of the education minister are his personal remarks. I as a father don’t want my children- daughters to be deprived of education,” said Raziq, a resident of Bamyan.

“We never deprive our daughters of education–either in the religious schools or government schools,” said Nader, a resident of Nimruz.

There have been many reactions by media users in the country as well.

“The education minister claims that the schools are closed based on the people’s wish. The schools which were reopened for two days in Paktia, we have seen much praising of it, but after they were closed, we have seen protests inside and outside of Afghanistan,” said Shakila, a resident of Herat on social media.

“We have called for the reopening of girls’ schools from the first day and said that we have enrolled our children in the school to educate them,” said Mohammad Qassim, a resident of Kabul.

Former President Hamid Karzai said on Twitter he met with Markus Potzel, deputy head of  UNAMA, and discussed the current Afghan situation and the need to reopen girls’ schools. Karzai called for a return to intra-Afghan dialogue to ensure enduring peace and stability.

Special envoy for Afghan women, girls, and human rights Rina Amiri tweeted in response:

“The Taliban claim that schools are closed to girls due to families’ preference & culture. But parents, religious figures & people throughout Afghanistan have loudly & repeatedly demanded girls return to school. This is not Afghan culture but Taliban ideology imposed on Afghans,” Rina said.

Education Minister’s Remarks Trigger Strong Reactions
read more

Afghan girls take to streets to protest school closure in Paktia

Al Jazeera

10 September 2022

Dozens of girls protest in Gardez city after the Taliban shuts four schools, which were reopened on the intervention of tribal elders and school principals.

Dozens of girls have protested in Afghanistan’s Paktia province after Taliban authorities shut their schools just days after classes resumed, agencies and local media reported, as an estimated three million secondary school girls are shut out of school for more than a year now.

The Taliban has gone back on its promise to allow women’s education and job opportunities and has since imposed curbs on women’s rights, bringing back memories of its first stint in power between 1996-2001 during which women’s education was banned and women were banished from public life.

Late last month, a senior Taliban leader told Al Jazeera that the group is working to create a so-called “safe environment” for girls and women in secondary schools and the workplace, adding that Islam grants women the right to education, work, and entrepreneurship.

Earlier this month, four girls’ schools above sixth grade in Gardez, the provincial capital, and one in the Samkani district began operating after a recommendation by tribal elders and school principals, but without formal permission from the Taliban’s Ministry of Education.

When students in Gardez went for classes on Saturday, they were told to return home, a women’s rights activist and residents told AFP.

“This morning when they did not allow the girls to enter schools, we held a protest,” activist Yasmin and an organiser of the rally, told the news agency over the phone.

Images on social and local media, including TOLO news, show the girls dressed in their school uniforms – some in head-to-toe burqas, others in school uniforms and white veils – marching through the centre of Gardez to protest the closure.

“Why have you closed our schools? Why are you playing with our emotions?” one girl is heard saying through tears in one of the videos.

“The students protested peacefully, but soon the rally was dispersed by security forces,” one Gardez resident who asked not to be named told AFP.

Officials maintain the ban is just a “technical issue” and classes will resume once a curriculum based on Islamic rules is defined. A year after the Taliban took power in Afghanistan, a few public schools continue to operate in parts of the country following pressure from local leaders and families.

They remain shut in most provinces, however, including the capital Kabul, as well as Kandahar.

The Taliban has also imposed restrictions on women’s movement and required them to cover themselves from head to toe in public.

In March, they shuttered all girls’ secondary schools hours after reopening them for the first time under their rule.

Approximately three million girls are currently banned from getting secondary education in Afghanistan, according to UNICEF.

More than half of Afghanistan’s 39 million people need humanitarian help and six million are at risk of famine, according to the UN.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Afghan girls take to streets to protest school closure in Paktia
read more

Tajikistan ‘rounding up and deporting Afghan refugees’

and Hikmat Noori

The Guardian

Fri 9 Sep 2022 08.03 EDT

The Tajikistan authorities are rounding up Afghan refugees and forcing them to cross the border back into Afghanistan, despite some having been granted asylum in other countries.

According to reports from Tajikistan’s 10,000-strong Afghan refugee community, people are being picked up off the street and houses raided in a spate of recent round-ups of Afghan families, who have been sheltering in the country since the Taliban seized power in August 2021.

The UN’s refugee agency, UNHCR, confirmed that 80 Afghan refugees and asylum seekers had been deported from Tajikistan since 16 August.

The UNHCR has appealed to the Tajikistan authorities to stop the forced deportations. It is not clear what the motivation or policy is behind them; until a few weeks ago the Tajikistan government was cooperating with the UNHCR to shelter and resettle Afghans fleeing the Taliban authorities.

Elizabeth Tan, UNHCR’s director of international protection, said: “We are asking Tajikistan to stop detaining and deporting refugees, an action that clearly puts lives at risk.

“Forced return of refugees is against the law and runs contrary to the principle of non-refoulement, a cornerstone of international refugee law,” she said, referring to the legal tenet that forbids a country receiving asylum seekers from returning them to somewhere they would be at risk of persecution.

The UN documented a case of five Afghans forced back on 23 August. They included “a family comprising three children and their mother, [and] were returned to Afghanistan through the Panji Poyon border checkpoint in southern Tajikistan, despite UNHCR’s interventions to halt the deportations”, the UN agency stated.

Afghans in Tajikistan who spoke to the Guardian say that the numbers being forced back over the land border into Afghanistan is running into the hundreds, with forced deportations increasing over the past fortnight. They said that many Afghan refugees were being sent back without passports or identity documents and left to fend for themselves, with no way of getting to a place of safety.

For nearly a week, no one in Samira’s family has dared to step out of their flat in a small town in northern Tajikistan. Her children have not been to school and they have not felt safe enough to get groceries or medical supplies.

All around them, they say, other members of the Afghan refugee community are being detained and forcibly deported back to their home country without clear reason or justification.

“We are living with a lot of fear that we might be detained by the police and deported at any minute,” said Samira*, a former security official who escaped Afghanistan after repeated attempts on her life.

“We will be arrested by the Taliban the moment we enter Afghanistan. I spent years fighting them, they will seek their revenge.”

“Even those with proper documents and ongoing asylum cases in western countries are being picked from the streets and dropped off at the border between Afghanistan and Tajikistan … which is why we stopped going outside,” said Ejaz*, Samira’s husband.

“With one of the families we know, the husband was deported without even being allowed to appeal against the decision or see his wife and kids. The family had a flight scheduled for 12 September to Canada, where they were emigrating. But now the husband is back in Afghanistan, while the wife and two kids are struggling to survive here.”

Maryam, a former Afghan media personality who fled to Turkey to escape the Taliban, is frantic with worry for the rest of her family, who are refugees in Tajikistan. They have locked themselves inside their home and are living in terror.

“They told me that it started with Afghans being rounded up from the streets, so they stopped leaving their homes. But then they [authorities] started raiding homes and picked up people from their places of work,” she said.

“I am afraid to talk to them on the phone or to check in with friends. Everyone is afraid they will be tracked and deported.”

While Samira and her family are also in the final stages of emigrating to Canada, she is racked with dread over the deportations. Her concern is mainly for her children, who have already experienced immense trauma. “The refugee life has been hard on children. They deserved a better future,” she said.

The Tajikistan authorities have been contacted for comment.

Names have been changed to protect their identity

Tajikistan ‘rounding up and deporting Afghan refugees’
read more

One Year On, Official Cabinet of the Islamic Emirate Still Not Announced

The Islamic Emirate’s spokesman stated that the current cabinet is only temporary and will be replaced in the future.

Even though it has been more than a year since the Islamic Emirate’s acting cabinet was established, the formal cabinet has still not been announced by the current government, and all of the ministers are still serving as acting heads.

The Islamic Emirate’s spokesperson, Zabiullah Mujahid, cited reasons including the lack of a constitution, the inability to create a council, and a few other governance-related issues as key reasons why an official cabinet has not been announced.

“At the moment, our cabinet is acting; however, this is still the result of some wisdom, since there are still some governance shortages in the country that need to be addressed. For instance, we do not yet have a council, the constitution has not yet been established, and there are still some other issues. Let us come together as a nation, and if we achieve stability, the system will no longer be acting,” he remarked.

In addition to this issue, the Islamic Emirate has not been recognized by any country for more than a year, and the international community has consistently called for the creation of an inclusive government. Kabul, however, has continually emphasized that the current government is already inclusive.

“Tell us so that we truly understand what kind of government you want. Believe me, they haven’t told us what kind of government they want up until now. However, the Afghan government must be the one to find a solution to that country’s issues,” said Amir Khan Muttaqi, the acting foreign minister.

But analysts have different views about the cabinet of the Islamic Emirate.

“Where there is no legislation, the relationship between the people and the government is not established, the structure of the government is not defined, the responsibilities, obligations, and duties of each power are not stated, it is difficult to announce the official cabinet,” said Sayed Javad Sajadi, another political analyst.

“The Taliban should construct a normal government with all the standards, with national legitimacy, a ruler, and declare their cabinet– if the Taliban really want to work for their country for their survival, and if they have come to rule,” said Aziz Marij, a political analyst.

One of the issues that sparked controversy during the past year was the current cabinet’s lack of female representation.

Meanwhile, one of the demands of the international community over the past year was that Afghanistan’s territory not be used against other nations, and Kabul has consistently said that it is bound to this commitment.

“No person or group has been able to use Afghan land against any country in the past twelve months,” said Amir Khan Muttaqi, acting foreign minister.

The Islamic Emirate’s spokesman stated that the current cabinet is only temporary and will be replaced in the future.

One Year On, Official Cabinet of the Islamic Emirate Still Not Announced
read more