Scores of Afghans have left for the US after their visas were processed in the Philippines

By JIM GOMEZ

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Nearly 200 Afghan nationals have been flown on to the United States after their special immigration visas were processed in the Philippines as part of an agreement between Manila and Washington, the U.S. Embassy in Manila said Sunday.

The Afghans left the Philippines in several groups on commercial flights last week after completing their application process for resettlement in the U.S., according to the embassy spokesperson Kanishka Gangopadhyay.

An embassy statement expressed “deep appreciation to the government of the Philippines for their cooperation and support for U.S. efforts to assist Afghan special immigrants.”

The Afghans, including many children, arrived in the Philippines on Jan. 6. Details of their numbers and location were kept secret by U.S. and Philippine officials. Washington covered the cost of their stay in the Philippines.

The Afghans primarily worked for the U.S. government in Afghanistan or were deemed eligible for U.S. special immigrant visas but were left behind when U.S. and NATO forces withdrew from Afghanistan after 20 years of war in August 2021 as the Taliban seized power.

At the time, the Taliban takeover exposed Afghan supporters of U.S. forces to potential retaliatory attacks by Afghanistan’s new rulers.

Outgoing President Joe Biden and President-elect Donald Trump have blamed one another for the chaotic pullout of U.S. forces.

Biden discussed the Afghan resettlement issue with Philippines leader Ferdinand Marcos Jr. when he visited the U.S. last year, Philippine officials said. In July, the Philippines agreed to temporarily host a U.S. immigrant visa processing center for the Afghan nationals although there were concerns over security due to threats faced by some of the Afghans trying to flee from the Taliban rule.

A senior Philippine official said last year that the accommodation in the Philippines was a one-time deal.

Marcos has rekindled relations with the U.S. since his 2022 election victory and has allowed an expansion of the American military presence under a 2014 defense agreement in a decision that has alarmed China.

The Marcos administration has also broadened military and defense ties with the U.S., Japan and Australia and moved to build stronger security relations with France, New Zealand and Canada to strengthen its territorial defense, including in the disputed South China Sea.

That has dovetailed with the Biden administration efforts to boost an arc of security alliances in the Indo-Pacific to better address concerns over China’s increasingly aggressive actions, including in the South China Sea, the East China Sea and in the Taiwan Strait, that have raised tensions to their highest level in decades.

Gomez is The AP Chief Correspondent in the Philippines.
Scores of Afghans have left for the US after their visas were processed in the Philippines
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Funding cuts to Afghanistan are the biggest threat to helping women, aid agency chief warns

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Funding cuts to Afghanistan are the biggest threat to helping the country’s women, the chief of a top aid agency warned Sunday.

Jan Egeland, the secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, said women and girls were bearing the brunt of dwindling financial support for nongovernmental groups and humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan.

The NRC helped 772,484 Afghans in 2022. That number fell to 491,435 in 2023. Last year, the aid agency helped 216,501 people. Half of its beneficiaries are women.

Egeland, who has made several visits to Afghanistan since 2021, said: “We see one after the other peer organization cutting programming and staff in the last two years. The biggest threat to programs helping Afghan women is funding cuts. The biggest threat to the future well-being of Afghan women is (the lack of) education.”

The Taliban takeover in August 2021 drove millions into poverty and hunger after foreign aid stopped almost overnight.

Sanctions against the country’s new rulers, a halt on bank transfers and frozen billions in Afghanistan’s currency reserves have cut off access to global institutions and the outside money that supported the aid-dependent economy before the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO forces.

The U.N. and others have urged the international community to continue supporting the beleaguered country.

Organizations like the Norwegian Refugee Council have helped keep public services afloat through education and health care programs, including nutrition and immunization.

But women and girls face more obstacles in accessing health care and education because of restrictions imposed by authorities and an ongoing shortage of female medical professionals, also exacerbated by Taliban decrees.

Egeland said Afghan women and girls had not forgotten world leaders telling them their “number one priority” was education and human rights. “Now we can’t even fund livelihood programming for widows and single mothers,” he told The Associated Press by telephone from the western province of Herat.

The international community provided humanitarian assistance in many countries where they disagreed with local policies. But opposition to Taliban policies, together with a “general starving” of aid funding in many countries, was worsening the shortfall in Afghanistan, he said.

Egeland said most of his discussions with Taliban officials on his trip were about the need to resume classes for women and girls. “They still argue that it will happen, but the conditions are not right,” he said. “They say they need to agree on what the conditions are.”

 

Funding cuts to Afghanistan are the biggest threat to helping women, aid agency chief warns
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UK Joins Call for Justice on Afghan Women’s Rights Violations

Chile, Costa Rica, Spain, France, Luxembourg, and Mexico are the six countries that initiated this process, which has since been joined by others.

The UK government has joined the group of countries that have referred Afghanistan’s violations of women’s human rights to the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

The UK Minister for Women and Equalities stated in the country’s parliament that Britain is seriously concerned about the situation of women’s and girls’ rights in Afghanistan.

Anneliese Dodds, the UK Minister for Women and Equalities, said: “We are deeply concerned by the appalling erosion of the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan, and we are seeking to use every avenue to exert pressure. I remind the House that on 9 January I announced that the UK had formally joined the list of countries pledging political support to the initiative to refer Afghanistan to the International Court of Justice for violations of the convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women.”

Hadiya, a student, told TOLOnews: “The demand of all Afghan women in these circumstances is to be able to study and work because it is their fundamental right to access education and employment.”

Alamtaba Rasooli, a women’s rights activist, commented on the restrictions on women in Afghanistan: “The Islamic Emirate’s government is obligated to lift these restrictions and deprivations, and the United Nations is also responsible for taking practical steps in this regard.”

The UK’s move to join this initiative comes a day after the Islamic Emirate reacted to a Human Rights Watch report on Afghanistan, stating that no actions have been taken against anyone’s rights in the country.

Salim Paigir, a political analyst, emphasized the importance of engagement with Afghanistan’s caretaker government. He stated: “Pressure is not effective. It would be better to engage, and the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan should also accept the legitimate demands of the Afghan people and the international community.”

This comes after Karim Khan, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), said that six countries had requested he investigate crimes committed against Afghan women under the renewed rule of the Islamic Emirate in Afghanistan.

Chile, Costa Rica, Spain, France, Luxembourg, and Mexico are the six countries that initiated this process, which has since been joined by others.

UK Joins Call for Justice on Afghan Women’s Rights Violations
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Pezeshkian and Putin Stress Stability in Afghanistan

Pezeshkian said that he also discussed cooperation in the South Caucasus, Syria, and the Middle East with Vladimir Putin in Moscow.

Masoud Pezeshkian, president of Iran, emphasized the importance of maintaining peace and stability in Afghanistan during a press conference with his Russian counterpart.

Masoud Pezeshkian stated that in his meeting with Vladimir Putin, President of Russia, they discussed various topics, including regional cooperation and Afghanistan.

The Iranian president, who traveled to Russia after visiting Tajikistan, said during a joint press conference with Vladimir Putin: “We exchanged views on a range of regional issues, including the Middle East and the Caucasus, and emphasized the importance of maintaining peace and stability in Afghanistan.”

Pezeshkian said that he also discussed cooperation in the South Caucasus, Syria, and the Middle East with Vladimir Putin in Moscow.

For more than three years, Iran and Russia have been among the countries maintaining close relations with the Islamic Emirate, with representatives from these countries occasionally visiting Afghanistan.

The caretaker government has also stated that strengthening relations between Tehran and Moscow is beneficial for Afghanistan.

Hamdullah Fitrat, Deputy Spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, stated: “Afghanistan has good relations with both Russia and the Islamic Republic of Iran. We emphasize strengthening these relations further, as regional stability and security benefit all countries, and Afghanistan’s security is particularly important for everyone.”

Previously, during a joint press conference with Tajikistan President Emomali Rahmon in Dushanbe, the Iranian president said that they had discussed regional developments, including the situation in Afghanistan and border security.

Pezeshkian and Putin Stress Stability in Afghanistan
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EU, UNHCR Join Forces for Afghan Refugees

According to the EU report, Afghans represent one of the world’s largest refugee populations, with 2.6 million registered globally.

The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the European Union (EU) have signed a new agreement to continue to support displaced Afghans and host communities in Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, and countries in Central Asia.

According to this agreement, with substantial EU funding of €36 million, hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees, returnees, and internally displaced persons (IDPs) will benefit from essential protection, livelihood opportunities, and other basic services.

Veronika Boskovic Pohar, chargée d’affaires of Delegation of the European Union to Afghanistan, said: “The EU will continue our strong support to Afghans on the move. This new contribution to UNHCR is part of a bigger EU effort in the area of migration.”

According to the EU report, Afghans represent one of the world’s largest refugee populations, with 2.6 million registered globally. Of these some 2.2 million are in Iran and Pakistan.

Additionally, some 3.2 million people remain internally displaced within Afghanistan and hundreds of thousands have returned from neighbouring countries since September 2023.

UNHCR’s Representative in Afghanistan, Arafat Jamal, said: “This longstanding partnership with the European Union marks a significant step forward in our efforts to support Afghan returnees and refugees in host countries.”

Although war is no longer the main cause of displacement, international organizations and the United Nations speak of the existence of a humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan.

The report states that child labor, related violence, and restrictions on women are among the important factors that have caused the migration of Afghan citizens.

EU, UNHCR Join Forces for Afghan Refugees
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They were part of Afghanistan’s first-ever all-female flight. Then their lives were turned upside down.

In 2021, six women — two pilots and four cabin crew — participated in Afghanistan’s first-ever all-female flight. It was a historic moment. Their photos and videos were shared all over the world. Then, a few months later, their lives were turned upside down when the Taliban toppled the Afghan government and took over the country.

It was all smiles on Flight 104 out of Kabul on a sunny February day in 2021.

The all-women crew was dressed in company uniform — dark, navy suits and saffron-colored headscarves.

The flight was operated by one of Afghanistan’s national carriers — Kam Air.

The women on that flight made history by taking part in the country’s first all-female commercial flight. It was short, about 90 minutes, and it went from the capital, Kabul, to the city of Herat in the west.

This was a big deal because it showed how far Afghan women had come since the Taliban ruled their country in the 1990s. Little did the crew know that a few months later, their lives would be turned upside down when the Taliban took over the country once again in August of 2021.

Now, as the fourth anniversary of that flight approaches, the women and others who witnessed the moment are reflecting on the experience and the setbacks to women’s rights in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.

“There were concerns about the safety of the women, the safety of me involved in this, the [flight], hijacking, all these kinds of things,” said aviation enthusiast and YouTuber Josh Cahill, who documented the whole journey. Cahill reviews airlines in different countries, and the project was part of a public relations campaign for Kam Air.

At the time, the Taliban were fighting a bloody battle with the Afghan army, and American forces were withdrawing after two decades of war in the country.

War aside, every woman operating that flight had fought hard against a patriarchal society that saw them as less than their male counterparts.

“We agreed on not having any announcements during the flight just because Afghans are very conservative — some of them, not all of them — but some being aware that, ‘Oh, there’s only women in charge on this flight,’ they wouldn’t feel comfortable,” Cahill explained.

Mohadese Mirzaee was the co-pilot. That day, she was working alongside Veronika Borisova, a Ukrainian pilot.

Mirzaee became interested in flying at an early age. She was good at math and science, and for her 16th birthday, her mom took her to one of the air bases in Afghanistan to chat with some of the pilots.

“They were like, ‘Oh nah, why do you want to become a pilot? You can join the tower [and] become an air traffic controller, which is also a very good job,’ but that was not what I wanted. And they were like, “No, you’re too small, you’re too young, you’re not fit to fly,”” she said.

It was hard not to feel disillusioned, Mirzaee recalled.

In 2015, Mirzaee traveled to Canada on a student exchange program. There, she signed up for flight lessons and learned the basics. When the exchange program ended, she returned to Afghanistan.

This time, she said, she tried to get into a training program at Kam Air.

“I called this company every single day, to the point that they were so sick of me and they were like, ‘OK, fine, yeah, just come to the office, bring your documents and we’ll talk to you,’” she recalled.

Mirzaee spent the next few years in intense training.

The US-led invasion of Afghanistan brought so much death and devastation, but it also created an opening for women like Mirzaee to pursue their dreams. Education was more widely available to Afghan women and girls, despite the security challenges.

Mirzaee had worked so hard to become a pilot that she didn’t even have time to think about her achievement, she said. Not until she took part in that all-female flight in 2021.

“I had the time to realize what I have actually done. I was waiting for that moment my whole life.”

The video of the flight was released on March 8, 2021, to coincide with International Women’s Day. It went viral, and Mirzaee said she was flooded with messages from Afghan girls who told her they wanted a future in aviation, too.

Now, they had a role model that Mirzaee didn’t have.

Nargis Mahmoodi was also on that flight. She said she felt extremely proud to be part of the team that made history. Mahmoodi grew up in a refugee camp in neighboring Pakistan. Her family was forced to leave Afghanistan because of the war.

Mahmoodi’s family supported her decision to become a flight attendant, sh

amily all the time and to be in close proximity with other, unrelated men,” she explained.

After the video came out, all of the women involved in that flight worried about their safety. The Taliban were against women receiving this type of spotlight. They frequently threatened and carried out attacks against Afghans who cooperated with foreigners and, in their words, “promoted un-Islamic behavior.”

Six months after their flight, the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, unleashing total chaos. Thousands of people rushed to Kabul Airport with the hope of leaving on one of the last remaining flights.

“Everything happened [at] such a fast pace, it was really hard to keep up,” said Cahill, the YouTuber.

Cahill had left Afghanistan but remained in touch with the women. He found out that Veronika Borisova, the captain of the all-female flight, was scheduled to fly out of Kabul the night that the capital fell to the Taliban.

The airport was a mess, he said. There was no air control tower or flight plan. But this was their only chance.

“They took off into uncontrolled airspace. So, she had to make sure [herself that] there was no traffic,” Cahill explained. “She was also concerned about surface-to-air missiles being fired by the Taliban.”

Mirzaee also managed to get on that plane.

“I was thinking about everything that we have done and how we lost it quickly. It’s just unbelievable [that] in a matter of months I was at the highest point of my life and then the lowest point of my life,” she said.

They eventually made it to Ukraine, and from there, Mirzaee moved to Bulgaria, where she now works as a cargo plane pilot. Borisova works for the same company.

Mahmoodi, the flight attendant, was left behind. After a failed rescue attempt and a month of hiding from the Taliban, she made it out to Pakistan and from there to Brazil, where she lives now.

Today, Mahmoodi works in customer service at a company in São Paulo. She said she has learned Portuguese and gotten more accustomed to the new culture.

One of the flight attendants, Arefa Ahmadi, claimed asylum in the US; another, Shagufa Haidary, lives in Germany. Cahill and the crew haven’t been able to reach the fifth member of the all-female flight, Freshta Darwish.

Meanwhile, every time Mirzaee hears the news about yet another restriction on women in Afghanistan, her heart breaks.

The Taliban have barred women from getting an education beyond the 6th grade or working in most professions.

“Right now, we’re not using half of our population, so obviously, our country is not going to reach anywhere,” Mirzaee said.

Mahmoodi in Brazil said that sometimes she dreams of flying again.

She wasn’t able to take her uniform when she fled Afghanistan, because she was afraid of getting into trouble with the Taliban at one of the checkpoints.

The only item she did manage to take with her was her saffron-colored headscarf, which she keeps in a safe place.

They were part of Afghanistan’s first-ever all-female flight. Then their lives were turned upside down.
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Austin, the first Black defense secretary, ends his term marred by Afghanistan but buoyed by Ukraine

By TARA COPP

WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin will bid farewell Friday to the forces and personnel he has led through a tumultuous term that had three major military crises, a global pandemic and a personal brush with cancer that became a flashpoint for the way it was mishandled.

Austin, 71, spent 41 years of his life in a military uniform. He retired as a highly decorated four-star general who earned a Silver Star — an award given for gallantry in action — for leading troops from the front in the initial 2003 invasion of Iraq.

He is one of the many Pentagon leaders who have served in combat and has “dust on his boots” — something President-elect Donald Trump’s choice for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has falsely claimed is his distinction and why he is needed to restore a military hollowed out by “woke” diversity initiatives.

“There have been a lot of narratives out there about how capable, how weak our military is,” Austin said in an interview with The Associated Press. “You’ve just got to look at the things we have done, that we continue to do, at a moment’s notice.”

Austin retired from the Army in 2016 only to be asked to return to the Pentagon by President Joe Biden in 2021, making history as the nation’s first Black defense secretary.

He took the helm of the Pentagon at the height of COVID-19 and just weeks after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by a mob of Trump’s supporters. His early months saw the department working through a divisive COVID-19 vaccine mandate for the force and a deep dive to determine whether there was a wider extremism problem in the ranks. More than 230 people with a military background were arrested in connection with the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection.

Austin repeatedly said he believed extremism was not a problem. Indeed, service members and veterans who radicalize make up a tiny fraction of a percentage point of the millions who have honorably served, though an Associated Press investigation last year found it was on the rise.

But it would be the shocking collapse of the Afghan government to the Taliban that would forever mar Austin’s tenure. The U.S. withdrawal had been previously negotiated by Trump, and, because of that, there were only 2,500 U.S. forces in Afghanistan when Biden took office.

To this day, there’s a deep sense of betrayal among some veterans over the loss of Afghanistan, which became a key part of Trump’s return to office.

Biden’s decision to move forward with the withdrawal led to a chaotic two weeks in August 2021, when the Air Force evacuated more than 124,000 people from Afghanistan in just 17 days.

Air Force C-17s and chartered aircraft landed at Kabul airport in a non-stop operation, but then 13 U.S. service members and 170 Afghans were killed by a suicide bomber just days before the last U.S. service member left.

All the hard-won gains by women and for democracy began being dismantled by the Taliban.

“There was a lot of speculation on what would happen if we left Afghanistan. The world was going to come to an end. We were going to get attacked every day, and that just hasn’t happened,” Austin said. “Some horrible things have happened in terms of women’s rights. We’ll just have to continue to work on those things.”

The Biden administration was still reeling from the withdrawal when it began warning that Russian President Vladimir Putin was assembling hundreds of thousands of troops along Ukraine’s border and was preparing to invade. In response to the invasion, Austin created the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a coalition of more than 50 partner nations that have sent more than $126 billion in weapons and training to Kyiv in the three years since.

Then Hamas launched its Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel.

Austin directed two aircraft carriers to sail immediately to the region, and in the year since, the widened conflict has spilled into the Red Sea, disrupting trade and engaging the U.S. Navy in the most intense running sea battle since World War II.

The Navy has engaged not only drones but also anti-ship ballistic missiles fired by Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen and ballistic missiles fired at Israel directly by Iran.

On one of Austin’s final days in office, the Defense Department’s inspector general released a report on his mishandling of his prostate cancer diagnosis in late 2023, when he failed to inform the White House of being hospitalized and incapacitated following complications with his treatment.

Austin is known as a deeply private man, and that desire for privacy came to a head in his diagnosis and hospitalization.

“I don’t want my health to be a media circus,” Austin texted his chief of staff while hospitalized. It became just that, and after revelations that he had not notified Congress for days that he was incapacitated, new processes were instituted to prevent the lack of notification from happening again.

Austin, the first Black defense secretary, ends his term marred by Afghanistan but buoyed by Ukraine
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India steps up engagement with Taliban

Voice of America

January 15, 2025

The first high level diplomatic meeting held between India and the Taliban leadership marked a significant step in rebuilding New Delhi’s influence in Afghanistan, according to analysts. They say New Delhi’s growing engagement with the Taliban is prompted by strategic considerations in the Central Asian country that has important implications for its security and is likely to deepen amid growing tensions between the Taliban and Pakistan.

In the meeting between Indian foreign secretary Vikram Misri and acting Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, held in Dubai last week, India agreed to consider engaging in development projects in Afghanistan “in the near future” and provide more support to the health sector and refugee rehabilitation. Both sides also discussed boosting trade ties.

Calling India a “significant regional and economic partner,” the Afghan foreign ministry said in a statement that “we want to strengthen political and economic relations with India.”

The engagement marked a major shift since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, which was seen as a huge diplomatic setback for India’s two-decade long efforts to build deeper ties with Kabul.

“New Delhi’s approach is a pragmatic one, grounded in the view that isolating the Taliban will make it tougher to achieve its goals in Afghanistan,” Michael Kugelman, director of the South Asia Institute at the Wilson Center, told VOA in emailed comments.

The Taliban’s return had raised fears in New Delhi that Afghanistan will become a haven for militants from Pakistan who have been at the forefront of a three-decade violent separatist insurgency in Indian Kashmir.

But analysts point out that the Taliban leadership has built confidence in New Delhi by not doing anything that goes against India’s security interests.

“They have observed their commitments to not allow anti-India terror activity on their soil quite scrupulously. So the level of engagement has been upgraded steadily,” said Sushant Sareen, senior fellow at the Observer Research Foundation. “Afghanistan is seen as the epicenter of the arc of instability in this region and it is critical for India’s interests to be present there.”

India’s détente with the Taliban began in 2022 when it started dispatching food and medicine as part of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan. In the same year, it reopened its mission in Kabul with a small “technical team.”

The engagement between the two countries likely will gain momentum amid tensions between Kabul and Islamabad over Pakistan’s allegations that the Taliban support militants linked to the outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, in carrying out attacks against Pakistani civilians and security forces.

“India’s outreach to the Taliban is certainly easier given Pakistan’s messy ties with the Taliban,” Kugelman said. “And given the reality of India-Pakistan rivalry, New Delhi likely sees an opportunity to exploit Pakistan’s tensions with the Taliban and pursue closer ties with the Taliban, to gain an upper hand in a longstanding competition between India and Pakistan for influence in Afghanistan.”

During last week’s meeting between Misri and Muttaqi, India underlined “its readiness to respond to the urgent developmental needs of the Afghan people.”

Before the Taliban takeover in 2021, India was the largest regional provider of development aid to Kabul and had invested about $3 billion in projects that included schools, roads, dams and hospitals. Many of those projects had stalled after the Taliban takeover. Some could restart, analysts say.

“The Indian goal is to protect the good things India has done over the decades, and renew its developmental activities,” said Chintamani Mahapatra, founder of the Kalinga Institute of Indo Pacific Studies in New Delhi. “Afghanistan is a very important country for us, so India is interested in engaging the Taliban rather than isolating it, no matter who is in the seat of power. And to achieve stability, there needs to be a modicum of economic development.”

Both sides also agreed to promote the use of Iran’s Chabahar port for supporting trade and commercial activities – the port, which India is helping develop, is seen as crucial for both sides. India wants to strengthen connectivity via Afghanistan and Iran to Central Asia which it cannot access directly by land due to Pakistan’s refusal of transit rights. For landlocked Afghanistan, which has to rely heavily on Pakistani land routes and seaports to conduct trade, the Chabahar port provides an alternate route.

The Taliban also has urged New Delhi to issue visas to Afghan businessmen, patients and students — a process that virtually halted after its takeover because of the closure of Indian consulates, security concerns and because India, like most countries, does not officially recognize the Taliban. But New Delhi will take a calibrated approach toward potential visitors from Afghanistan, according to analyst Sareen.

“India is not ready to open the floodgates for Afghans coming into India. New Delhi will remain cautious, but it will continue to deepen the engagement. Because while India has reservations on some aspects of the Taliban’s policies towards women and its ideology, realism is guiding Indian policy. After all, it cannot pretend that Afghanistan does not exist anymore. We are virtually their next door neighbors,” Sareen said.

India’s decision to build ties with the Taliban at a time when countries like Russia and China are strengthening relations with Kabul, is likely to find support in countries like the United States.

“As the U.S. contemplates how to approach the Taliban when it comes to sensitive but pressing issues, from Americans still being held captive in Afghanistan to concerns about Islamic State terrorism, it will likely find it useful that a key US partner has decided to opt for the path of engagement,” Kugelman said.

India steps up engagement with Taliban
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HRW Expresses Concern Over Increasing Restrictions on Women in Afghanistan

The report also mentions that critical journalists were arrested, and additional restrictions were imposed on the media this year.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) in its 2024 annual report expressed concern over what it describes as worsening human rights conditions in Afghanistan.

According to the report, restrictions on women have intensified this year, with women in Afghanistan facing serious obstacles to employment, freedom of expression, and movement.

The report states: “The situation in Afghanistan worsened in 2024 as the Taliban authorities intensified their crackdown on human rights, particularly against women and girls. Afghanistan remained the only country where girls and women were banned from secondary and university education, while also facing significant barriers to employment and freedom of movement, assembly, and speech.”

“2024 was painful for us because we stayed at home; we couldn’t attend courses or continue our studies,” Anahita, a student, told TOLOnews.

“Our demand from the Islamic Emirate is to reopen all schools and universities for girls,” said Beheshta, another student.

The report also mentions that critical journalists were arrested, and additional restrictions were imposed on the media this year.

Afghanistan’s economic crisis is another aspect highlighted in the Human Rights Watch report, stating that this crisis has left 23 million people in need of humanitarian aid.

The report said: “The Taliban also detained journalists and critics and imposed severe restrictions on the media. Afghanistan’s economic crisis left 23 million in need of humanitarian assistance; women and girls were disproportionally affected.”

“Instead of humanitarian aid, they should assist with large-scale projects to create long-term job opportunities,” said Abdul Haseeb Safi, an economic analyst.

Meanwhile, Zabihullah Mujahid, spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate, rejected the report, stating that ensuring citizens’ rights within the framework of Islamic rulings is the responsibility of the interim government, and no one is allowed to violate individuals’ rights.

Mujahid commented: “The measures taken for our sisters are based on Islamic Sharia principles, and we are also seeking solutions for some social issues. However, no one’s rights have been violated.”

This comes as the international community continues to link normalizing relations with the interim government to ensuring women’s rights in the country—a condition the Islamic Emirate has consistently viewed as a means of applying pressure on the government.

HRW Expresses Concern Over Increasing Restrictions on Women in Afghanistan
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White House: Pakistan still victim of Terrorism from across the border

The White House National Security spokesperson stated that the people of Pakistan continue to suffer from terrorist attacks coming from the Afghanistan border. John Kirby emphasized that the United States will continue to cooperate with Pakistan in countering terrorism.

In a press briefing on Wednesday, Kirby mentioned that Islamabad has never been a “formal ally” of the United States and that no official treaty has been signed between the two countries. However, he noted that the U.S. has collaborated with Pakistan over the past two decades in addressing terrorist threats along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

Kirby further acknowledged that despite this, the U.S. and Pakistan have worked together for several decades to combat terrorism, which “still persists between Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

He emphasized that these threats continue to linger along the border, highlighting the ongoing nature of the security challenges in the region.

Pakistan has accused the Afghan Taliban of supporting insurgents against the country, but the Taliban has consistently denied these allegations. Over the past three years, Islamabad has repeatedly called on the Afghan Taliban to expel the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan militants from Afghanistan and hand over their leaders.

Pakistan is experiencing a severe surge in militant violence, with 757 people killed and nearly as many injured in the first eight months of 2024, according to data from the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS).

For decades, Pakistan has been a key U.S. partner, first in the fight against Soviet influence in Afghanistan and later in the war on terrorism. However, during the two decades of U.S. and NATO presence in Afghanistan, Pakistan is said to have sheltered Taliban leaders, with former Afghan government officials claiming Islamabad supported the group’s insurgency.

The continuing tensions between the U.S. and Pakistan highlight the complexity of their relationship in the fight against terrorism. While cooperation persists, the historical grievances and ongoing security threats pose significant challenges to deeper bilateral collaboration.

As both countries navigate these issues, the future of their partnership will depend on continued diplomatic efforts to address mutual concerns, including counterterrorism measures and the stability of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region.

White House: Pakistan still victim of Terrorism from across the border
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