By Mohammad Yunus Yawar and Sayed Hassib
NO INCOME, NO AID
‘LIFE NEVER REMAINS THE SAME’
Reporting by Mohammad Ynunus Yawar and Sayed Hassib; Writing by Saad Sayeed; Editing by Clarence Fernandez
Reporting by Mohammad Ynunus Yawar and Sayed Hassib; Writing by Saad Sayeed; Editing by Clarence Fernandez
By ABDUL QAHAR AFGHAN
Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for an explosion at a Chinese restaurant in Afghanistan’s capital that killed at least seven people, including a Chinese national, and wounded more than a dozen others.
In a statement posted on its Aamaq news agency late Monday, the group said a suicide bomber entered the restaurant frequented by Chinese nationals in Kabul and detonated an explosive vest.
China has advised its citizens not to travel to Afghanistan in the near term after the bombing, and asked Chinese people and companies already in the country to strengthen security measures and evacuate from high-risk areas.
“China strongly condemns and resolutely opposes terrorism in all forms and supports Afghanistan and countries in the region in jointly combating all forms of terrorist violent acts,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said at a daily briefing in Beijing.
He said one Chinese national was killed and five others were wounded. He added that China is urging Afghan authorities “to make every effort to treat the injured, further take effective measures to protect the safety of Chinese nationals (and) projects,” and to find and punish the perpetrators.
The attack happened at a Chinese restaurant in the Shahr-e-Naw district in the city, according to police spokesperson Khalid Zadran, who said one Chinese national and six Afghans were killed in the blast. He said Monday that the restaurant was jointly owned by an Afghan man, a Chinese national and his wife.
Interior Ministry spokesperson Mufti Abdul Mateen Qani said Tuesday the incident was still being investigated. Afghan authorities have not officially confirmed the cause of the explosion.
The IS claim, which was widely shared by supporters of the militants, included a further threat against Chinese nationals in Afghanistan, linking the attack to China’s treatment of Uyghur Muslims.
While nearly all nations withdrew from Afghanistan following the Taliban offensive of 2021 that led to them seizing Kabul, China has maintained a major economic presence in the country. Beijing has yet to formally recognize Afghanistan’s Taliban-run government.
Muhammad u Allah Nemati, who runs a shop opposite the restaurant and witnessed Monday’s blast, said: “When the explosion happened, I fell from my seat. I saw many people dead and injured.”
The Italian charity EMERGENCY, which operates a surgical center located near the site, said it had received the casualties shortly after the blast.
Bashir Khalil, a doctor at the hospital, said Tuesday they had received 7 bodies and 14 wounded people, of which one was in critical condition.
Footage aired by Afghan broadcaster Tolo News showed people running along the street as smoke and dust billowed from the area.
Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari condemned the attack in a statement issued by his office late Monday. He accused Afghanistan’s Taliban government of failing to uphold a ceasefire brokered by Qatar to end cross-border fighting that erupted between Afghanistan and Pakistan in October, particularly commitments to prevent militant groups from using Afghan territory to carry out attacks.
Kabul has repeatedly said it does not allow its territory to be used by militant groups.
The Islamic State group ‘s affiliate in the region, which is a major Taliban rival, has conducted attacks on schools, hospitals, mosques and Shiite areas throughout the country before and after the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan.
Samy Magdy contributed to this report from Cairo.
A massive explosion rocked Afghanistan’s capital Kabul on Monday, killing seven people including foreign nationals while more than 20 injured in the capital’s Shahr-e-Naw, considered as the most secure.
Though authorities and police did not immediately reveal the cause of the explosion, they said that the investigation was underway. While no terrorist group has yet claimed responsibility, Islamic State – Khorasan Province (ISKP), an active Islamic State affiliate, has taken responsibility for various major bombings killing civilians, minorities, and rival groups in Afghanistan since around 2015.
The ISKP has both claimed and linked to airport bombings and suicide attacks in Kabul. The extremist group has been very active in the country that has seen decades of destruction and has carried out occasional attacks.
Since the Taliban regime took control of war-torn Afghanistan in 2021, after United States withdrawal in the same year, and claimed to restore security, bomb attacks have not stopped, and many of them claimed by the local arm of the ISIS. Various blast cases throughout the country in recent years have usually been attributed to extremist groups.
Kabul airport bombing (Jan 1, 2023): A blast occurred outside the airport checkpoint killed and wounded many. ISKP claimed responsibility.
Foreign Ministry blast (Jan 12, 2023) – A bomb attack outside foreign ministry killed many people and wounded dozens and was claimed by the ISIS.
Explosions during diplomatic talks (Oct 10, 2025) – Explosions were reported in Kabul amid diplomatic talks between Taliban and India, amid factional accusations and rising tensions with Pakistan.
Qala Bakhtiar suicide bombing (Sept 2, 2024) – Many people were killed and injured after a suicide bombing in Kabul’s Qala Bakhtiar neighbourhood. ISKP claimed this attack as well.
Kabul ambulance bombing (Jan 27, 2018) – Another major suicide bombing took place in an ambulance car that killed more than 100 people and wounded hundreds. For this attack, Taliban claimed responsibility.
Inter-Continental Hotel attack (Jan 20, 2018) – Gunmen stormed the hotel, killing around 40 people, including foreigners; Taliban gunmen were responsible.
Explosion occurs in downtown Shahr-e-Naw neighbourhood, thought to be one of the most secure areas of Kabul.
The restaurant hit by the blast on Monday is in the commercial Shahr-e-Naw neighbourhood of Kabul that includes office buildings, shopping complexes and embassies, police spokesperson Khalid Zadran said. The district is considered one of the safest in the city.
One Chinese national, identified as Ayub, and six Afghans were killed in the blast, which occurred near the kitchen, while several others were injured, Zadran added.
Videos shared on social media showed debris scattered on the street outside and smoke spewing from a large hole torn into the front of the restaurant building.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, and there was no immediate word on the cause of the explosion. Authorities said they were investigating.
The Italian NGO Emergency said a medical facility it oversees in Kabul had received 20 people from the blast, seven of whom were dead when they arrived. The organisation said the casualty figures were “still provisional”.
“Twenty people have been received at EMERGENCY’s Surgical Centre in Kabul following an explosion this afternoon in the Shahr-e-Naw area, near the hospital. Among those received were seven people dead on arrival,” the NGO said in a statement.
It added that four women and a child were among the wounded.
Blasts in Kabul and across Afghanistan have been rarer since the Taliban returned to power after the United States withdrawal in 2021, but ISIL (ISIS) affiliates are still active in the country and carry out sporadic attacks.
A new United Nations report reveals that opium poppy cultivation and opium production in Afghanistan fell significantly in 2025, continuing the steep contraction of Afghanistan’s traditional opiate economy — but shifts in drug markets and economic pressures pose new challenges for the country and the region.
According to the Afghanistan Opium Survey 2025 by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the total area under opium poppy cultivation this year was estimated at about 10,200 hectares, a 20% decrease compared with 2024 and a dramatic drop from levels recorded before the Islamic Emirate’s nationwide ban on narcotics cultivation in 2022.
The survey also shows that opium production fell even more sharply — by 32% — to an estimated 296 tons in 2025. At these levels, the raw material could yield between 22 and 34 tons of export-quality heroin, substantially lower than in previous years, the report stated.
UNODC analysts point to a combination of factors behind the decline. The strict ban imposed by Afghanistan’s authorities continues to be enforced in many regions, and many farmers have shifted to growing cereals and other lawful crops.
However, worsening drought and low rainfall have left more than 40% of farmland uncultivated, undermining legitimate production and incomes.
The northeastern provinces of Afghanistan remained the centre of opium production in 2025, a pattern that has continued since 2023, while cultivation in southern and southwestern provinces such as Helmand and Kandahar continues to decline.
Economic indicators in the report suggest that farmers’ income from opium sales fell sharply — from about US $260 million in 2024 to around $134 million in 2025, reflecting both lower production and changes in market conditions.
While this contraction marks a notable shift in Afghanistan’s illicit crop landscape, the UNODC warns that the evolving dynamics of drug trafficking present serious concerns.
The agency notes a rise in synthetic drugs, particularly methamphetamine, which are easier to produce, harder to detect and more resilient to climate shocks than traditional opiates.
Organized crime groups may increasingly favour these substances, complicating regional law-enforcement and public health responses, UNODC stated.
Rising threat of synthetic drugs
The UN report warns however, that synthetic drugs are emerging as a growing threat.
According to UNODC, criminal networks are increasingly turning to substances such as methamphetamine, which can be produced year-round and do not rely on agricultural cycles or large areas of farmland. This makes synthetic drugs less vulnerable to crop bans, drought and seasonal disruptions.
Unlike opium poppy cultivation, which is highly visible and geographically concentrated, synthetic drug production can take place in small, concealed laboratories, making detection and enforcement significantly more difficult.
UNODC notes that this shift poses serious challenges for law enforcement agencies in Afghanistan and neighbouring countries.
The report also highlights that synthetic drugs are often cheaper to produce, easier to transport and highly profitable, increasing their appeal to organised crime groups.
Trafficking routes for these substances frequently overlap with existing smuggling networks used for opiates, allowing criminal groups to adapt quickly to changing conditions.
Public health risks are another major concern. Synthetic drugs are associated with higher addiction rates, unpredictable potency and severe health consequences, placing additional strain on already fragile healthcare systems across the region, the agency stated.
UNODC warns that without comprehensive counter-narcotics strategies that address both traditional drugs and emerging synthetic markets, the decline in opium production could be offset by the expansion of more dangerous and harder-to-control substances.
The agency is calling for increased regional cooperation, improved chemical precursor controls, and sustained international support to prevent Afghanistan from becoming a key hub for synthetic drug production and trafficking.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Interior has previously announced that activities related to the cultivation, trade and smuggling of drugs in Afghanistan have reached zero. According to the ministry, in the past year, about 200,000 kilograms of various types of natural and synthetic drugs have been discovered and seized, all of which have been burned and destroyed.
Qasim Khalid, Deputy Minister of Counter-Narcotics at the Ministry of Interior, says that during the republic era, high-ranking officials were involved in drug trafficking and skillfully smuggled them to foreign countries.
According to Khalid: “In the past year, about 200,000 kilograms of various types of natural and synthetic drugs have been discovered and seized, all of which have been burned and destroyed.”
Khalid added that in the past year, about 750 drug traffickers have been arrested and prosecuted.
Khaama Press

The UN warns that 17.4 million Afghans, over one-third of the population, may face acute food insecurity in 2026 amid worsening crises.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has warned that approximately 17.4 million people in Afghanistan, over a third of the population, could face acute food insecurity in 2026. Of these, around 4.7 million are expected to reach Phase 4 of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), indicating a crisis-level emergency.
OCHA highlighted that Afghanistan is likely to experience one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises next year. Years of conflict, economic fragility, low investment in essential services, and the rapid erosion of basic rights have left vast segments of the population highly vulnerable.
The report also notes that chronic pressures are worsening due to escalating food insecurity, mass returns of displaced populations, climate-induced droughts, frequent natural disasters, and systematic exclusion of women and girls from public life. These intersecting crises amplify the country’s humanitarian challenges.
International agencies emphasize that food shortages are compounded by political instability and limited government capacity to respond to emergencies. Humanitarian access in remote and conflict-affected areas remains a critical challenge, making timely interventions difficult.
According to OCHA, nearly 22 million people in Afghanistan may rely on humanitarian assistance in 2026, underscoring the urgent need for international support, funding, and coordinated relief efforts.
Afghanistan’s food insecurity has been escalating for years, fueled by ongoing conflicts, droughts, and high inflation rates. In recent months, local reports indicate that staple food prices have risen sharply, leaving many families unable to afford basic nutrition.
Previous United Nations assessments have warned that without sustained international intervention, malnutrition rates, especially among children under five, could spike dramatically, leading to long-term health and developmental challenges across the country.
Humanitarian experts stress that immediate, large-scale assistance is essential to prevent widespread famine and social collapse. Without urgent action, millions of Afghans could face a humanitarian catastrophe in 2026, requiring global coordination and political commitment.