Over 1000 Afghan Refugees Return from Pakistan, Says Taliban

The Taliban's Ministry of Refugees announced that more than 1,000 Afghan refugees returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan in the past four days.

The Taliban's Ministry of Refugees announced that more than 1,000 Afghan refugees returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan in the past four days.
The ministry stated on Monday that among them, 24 had been imprisoned in Pakistan and were recently released.
Taliban’s border officials in Kandahar said that these refugees have returned to Afghanistan through the Spin Boldak border crossing.
According to the reports, Pakistan and Iran have increased pressure on Afghan refugees these days. Only this week, nearly five thousand Afghan refugees have been deported from Iran.


The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) in a report on the human rights situation in Afghanistan in May and June stated that at least 15 people were killed and 49 wounded as a result of IED attacks, the vast majority of them civilians.
The report stressed that majority of these casualties occurred in two attacks in Faizabad city, Badakhshan province, both claimed by self-identified Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant –Khorasan Province (ISIL-KP).
It also documented 45 civilian casualties (19 killed, 26 wounded) attributed to explosive remnants of war during the period.
According to this report, women are prevented from traveling abroad without a male guardian (sharia mahram), and in one case in June, a woman (a local employee of the United Nations in Afghanistan) was threatened with death by the forces of the Intelligence Directorate of Taliban, and after two days she resigned.
It has also been said that the forces of the Ministry of Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice continue to beat women, and in one case on June 19, a woman was beaten up and ordered her to leave a public park.
UNAMA also reported that the ban on women's work has affected the activities of this organization in Afghanistan, and since April 5, all UNAMA employees, including men and women, continue to work from home with this organization to prevent a discriminatory approach in the workplace.
The UN report still indicates that corporal punishment and execution of death sentences continue, and the second case of qisas punishment (death penalty) was on June 20.
The report emphasised that extra-judicial killings continue all over Afghanistan, and the UNAMA report has documented several cases of such killings, at least two of which were carried out by the Taliban forces in Takhar and Samangan provinces.
It added that arbitrary arrests and detentions of former government and military personnel – often accused of affiliation with the National Resistance Front – are also ongoing, particularly in Kabul and Panjshir provinces.
Apart from this, even killings of individuals accused of affiliation with ISIL-KP were also recorded in May and June in Nangarhar and Kunar provinces, the report said.
The report also focused on freedom of media in Afghanistan and stated that the de facto authorities continue to arbitrarily arrest and detain journalists.
In fact, UNAMA stated that Taliban’s Departments of Information and Culture took steps to establish committees aimed at monitoring activities of the media in their respective provinces. UNAMA questioned the presence of such bodies and said that no announcement has been made explaining the exact mandate of these committees.
However, the report added that UNAMA has recorded at least one instance where a committee conducted an unannounced inspection at a private radio station in May and although the committee reportedly did not identify any concerns regarding the station’s activities, the unexpected nature of the visit led journalists to believe these committees may further jeopardise media independence.
The report also touched upon the activities of the Ministry of Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice of the Taliban and said that the ministry continues to both enforce existing instructions and issue new directives, many of which interfere with the fundamental freedoms and daily lives of women and girls.
It said that UNAMA continues to record instances of Taliban’s Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice personnel arbitrarily arresting and ill-treating individuals who they view as not following their decrees, particularly those pertaining to hijab (for women) and beard length (for men).

Hossein Amir Abdollahian, Iran’s foreign minister, urged the international community to focus on the movement of the terror groups in Afghanistan and said that if attention is not paid to the issue, the world and the region will face negative consequences impacts of it.
During a meeting with Feridun Sinirlioğlu, the UN Coordinator for Afghanistan, he said that immediate solutions are needed to address the terror issue in Afghanistan.
On Monday, in a statement, the Iranian foreign ministry highlighted that during the meeting with the UN special coordinator, Amir Abdollahian stressed on the formation of an inclusive government and the fight against terrorism in Afghanistan.
The Iranian foreign minister and UN special coordinator for Afghanistan met on Sunday in Tehran, during which Amir Abdollahian also emphasised on supporting regional initiatives to help solve Afghanistan's challenges.
Iran’s Foreign Minister described Feridun Sinirlioğlu’s mission as a challenging one considering the current situation and expressed hope that the UN special coordinator would have a thorough assessment of the realities of Afghanistan.
According to the Iranian Foreign Ministry's statement, Sinirlioğlu has emphasised on the will of the United Nations in supporting regional initiatives in order to help form an inclusive government in Afghanistan.
During his trip to Tehran, this UN official also met with Hassan Kazemi Qomi, the special representative of the Iranian president in Afghanistan.
Qomi warned the UN envoy that Taliban policies increase instability and drug production in Afghanistan.

Khawaja Muhammad Asif, Pakistan’s defence minister, said that Pakistan will "uproot" the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) without the cooperation of the Afghan Taliban.
He stressed that Islamabad will not look to the will of the Taliban on countering militant groups inside Afghanistan.
Earlier, he criticised the Taliban and said that the group does not prevent the activities of the TTP within the framework of the Doha Agreement.
The increase in attacks of TTP on the Pakistani security forces has escalated tension between the Taliban and Pakistan and Asif has been a vocal critic of the Taliban’s hosting of TTP inside Afghanistan.
However, the Taliban have repeatedly reacted to Asif’s comments saying that they consider the TTP, Pakistan's "internal issue" and have urged Pakistan to talk with this militant group that wants to form a government like the Afghan Taliban in Pakistan.
On Saturday, Khawaja Asif said that the Taliban have ignored their commitments in the Doha Agreement and has not taken action to prevent the use of Afghan soil for terrorist activities.
In response, the Taliban spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid, told the BBC that the Taliban adheres to the Doha Agreement only in relation to the United States. He added that the Taliban has signed this "agreement with the United States and treats Pakistan not within the framework of the Doha Agreement, but as a friendly country”.
These statements of Mujahid provoked Pakistan's Defence Minister who said that "irrespective of Afghanistan’s stance, Pakistan stands resolute in uprooting terrorism from its soil, whatever the source. This is regardless of whether or not Kabul has the will to reign in militants from within its borders”.
The Afghan and Pakistani Taliban have supported one another for the past two decades.
However, in order to address Pakistan's criticisms, the Afghan Taliban has stressed that the group has implemented a plan to transfer TTP fighters from near the border of Pakistan to northern Afghanistan.

Abolfazl Chamandi, the deputy governor of Khorasan Razavi province, expressed hope that bilateral cooperation with the Taliban on projects such as the Khaf-Herat railway line will also impact the water rights issue from Helmand River.
Chamandi added that it took around 12 months for the Islamic Republic government agencies to operationalise the railway line.
This railway line was opened on Tuesday in the presence of officials of the Islamic Republic and the Taliban.
Chamandi added that through the Khaf-Herat railway, Afghanistan is connected to warm waters and this line also connects Iran to China.
Meanwhile, the deputy governor of Khorasan Razavi province emphasised that Iran should have a collective approach to resolving issues, including the water rights issue with the Taliban.
Over the past two years since taking power in Afghanistan, water rights has been the most challenging issue between the Taliban and the Islamic Republic. Despite numerous rounds of negotiations, the Islamic Republic officials have said that the water rights issue remains unresolved.
Earlier, the Minister of Interior of the Islamic Republic of Iran said that the Taliban should fulfil their responsibility and give 820 million cubic meters of Iran's rights from the Helmand River.

Mohammad Pour Khosh Saadat, the governor of Bandar-e Anzali in Gilan Province, announced that employing illegal immigrants in this city has been prohibited.
Saadat warned that in case of violation of the ban, the employers face fines and even imprisonment.
According to Saadat, if the employers violate the ban, they will be fined more than 210 US dollars for each working day, and in case of repeated violations, the amount will be more than 419 US dollars.
He added that according to Article 181 of the Labor Law of the Islamic Republic of Iran, employers who hire "foreign nationals without work permits" will be sentenced to imprisonment between 91 and 180 days.
The governor of Bandar-e Anzali described the presence of foreigners in this city as a social phenomenon with negative consequences.
Saadat told ISNA news agency, "This trend has become more intense recently, and the impact of the presence of Afghan nationals can have many negative consequences on the situation of Gilan province and Bandar-e Anzali city."
He stressed that hiring Afghans who lack work permits, results in an increase in the unemployment rate of the city, social anomalies, changes in the demographic structure of the city, as well as illegal marriages of foreign nationals with Iranian nationals.
After the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in August 2021, the migration of Afghans to Iran intensified. Many Afghans immigrate to Iran due to the tough economic situation and the Taliban’s repressive practices. However, according to the official announcement of the Taliban, Iran continues to deport Afghans more intensively, and according to reports, about 18,000 people have been returned to Afghanistan in the last ten days.