Unidentified Assailants Assassinate Taliban Judge & His Daughter in Ghor

In Ghor, unidentified assailants have carried out the murder of a well-known Taliban judge and his young daughter, according to local reports.

In Ghor, unidentified assailants have carried out the murder of a well-known Taliban judge and his young daughter, according to local reports.
Mawlawi Abdul Rahman, the spokesperson for the Taliban's police force in Ghor, confirmed the incident, revealing that the victim was Mohammad Juma Amini. Amini held the positions of a civil court judge and head of the appellate court in the region.
Till date, the attack remains unclaimed, with no individual or group stepping forward to accept responsibility.
The reports suggest that Amini's daughter was not even 10 years old at the time of the attack.
Furthermore, recent accounts from Ghor residents have surfaced, stating that in the Pasaband district, two additional Taliban members were murdered with axes and hatchets by unknown attackers.


Al-Mirsaad, a Taliban-affiliated media outlet, claimed that the Pakistani intelligence orchestrated the suicide attack on Friday in Kandahar city, and has been carried out by ISIS.
It wrote that the explosion is a message from Pakistan to the Taliban, which portrays how they can use ISIS to create instability in Afghanistan.
Sources from Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar province informed Afghanistan International that in this explosion at least 21 people had been killed, and 50 others got injured.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) also reported that the explosion’s death toll reached 20.
However, the Taliban's Interior Ministry on Friday confirmed that the explosion left three dead and 12 injured.
Al-Mirsaad, affiliated with the Taliban's intelligence, accused Pakistan and ISI of orchestrating Friday’s attack in Kandahar. It stated that the attack is part of Pakistan's military and proxy strategy in Afghanistan.
Earlier, the Taliban had stated that ISIS in Afghanistan had been suppressed and posed no threat to the group.
Al-Mirsaad has predicted that Pakistan would likely take additional actions in the near future to sow instability in Afghanistan, and urged Taliban forces to be ready to counter this development.

ISIS-K claimed responsibility for the explosion in front of the Kabul Bank branch in Kandahar city. According to Amaq, a news agency affiliated to ISIS, a suicide bomber targeted "Taliban militants”.
At least 21 people had been killed in the incident. The suicide bomber has been identified by ISIS as "Moawia Al-Panjshiri”.
The group claimed to have attacked "a gathering of Taliban militants who had come to the bank to receive their salaries”.
The Taliban’s Ministry of Interior had earlier announced that in a suicide bombing in front of Kabul Bank in Kandahar, "several citizens" were killed and injured. So far, the ministry has refrained from disclosing any accurate casualty figures.
However, sources from Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar province informed Afghanistan International that in the explosion, at least 21 people had been killed, and 50 others got injured.
Also, sources in the Taliban police command in Kandahar stated that the explosion occurred in a heavily guarded area.
According to them, the suicide attacker passed through checkpoints and detonated explosives among Taliban members.

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) announced that with the beginning of the new academic year in Afghanistan, 1.4 million girls have still been deprived of education beyond the sixth grade.
The organisation stated that female students were hopeful to return to their classrooms to pursue knowledge and growth.
UNESCO's office in Kabul wrote on its official Facebook page on Thursday, "Excluding girls from school harms their well-being and hinders Afghanistan's development."
On Wednesday, Taliban’s education ministry officials held the commencement ceremony for the new academic year at the Amani High School in Kabul without the presence of girls and women.
With the start of the new academic year, Taliban’s Minister of Education, Habibullah Agha, urged teachers and students to refrain from wearing clothing contrary to "Islamic principles and Afghani traditions”.
He said that teachers and students must align their "appearance and conduct" with Islamic principles.
However, the Taliban’s Education Minister did not provide any explanation regarding which clothing might be "contrary to Islamic and Afghan principles”.
Following the takeover of power in August 2021, the Taliban closed girls' schools beyond the sixth grade. Additionally, they prohibited girls from pursuing higher education at universities and women from employment in non-governmental organisations.
In the previous government, the new academic year began on the third day of the month Hamal (Afghanistan Calendar). However, the Taliban, by omitting the celebration of Nowruz, held the academic year commencement on first of this month.
The Taliban’s Ministry of Education requested reporters to attend the commencement ceremony for the new educational year at Amani High School. Additionally, this ministry instructed female reporters not to participate in this event.

Sources from Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar province informed Afghanistan International that in an explosion on Friday in the first district of this city, at least 21 people had been killed, and 50 others got injured.
Taliban members from the group’s police command in Kandahar stated that the explosion took place in a heavily guarded area.
According to them, the suicide attacker passed through inspection checkpoints and detonated explosives among Taliban members who were queuing up to receive their salaries in front of the Kabul Bank.
This explosion occurred near the outpost of the Taliban police command in Kandahar.
The Taliban’s Ministry of Interior announced that in a suicide bombing in front of Kabul Bank in Kandahar, "several citizens" were killed and injured. So far, the ministry has refrained from disclosing any accurate casualty figures.
In a statement, it stated that the explosion was "carried out by Khawarij”. The Taliban usually refer to ISIS as "Khawarij."
Residents of Kandahar said that the explosion was extremely powerful and could be heard from afar.
The Taliban's police commander in Kandahar confirmed that three people had been killed and 12 others have been injured due to the explosion in the city's first security district.
Some Taliban members in Kandahar and witnesses have described the death toll due to the explosion as “high”. In fact, some members of the group at the Kandahar police command told Afghanistan International that the casualty figures are higher than those officially announced.
No group has claimed responsibility for the explosion yet.
Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar had also announced that the victims of this attack had been transferred there and needed blood donations.

Zahra Baloch, Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesperson, provided details regarding the country's airstrikes on Khost and Paktika during a press briefing in Islamabad.
Baloch stated, "Pakistan has not invaded Afghanistan. The operation was not against the people, institutions, or government of Afghanistan. The targets were terrorists belonging to the Hafiz Gul Bahadur Group.”
Hafiz Gul Bahadur is a prominent commander of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) who recently claimed responsibility for an attack on Pakistani security forces in North Waziristan.
Baloch added that Pakistan conducted an intelligence-based operation on March 18 along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, targeting "terrorists" associated with the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group.
She said that civilians were not targeted in Pakistan's operations in Afghanistan. She stated that Pakistan respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Afghanistan."
However, she emphasised that Pakistan would not tolerate terrorist attacks on its soil.
The spokesperson of the Pakistani Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that Pakistan has repeatedly presented evidence of terrorist presence in Afghanistan.
Although the Taliban has denied the presence of the TTP in Afghanistan multiple times, Pakistan claims that Afghan Taliban have provided shelter to thousands of TTP militants in Afghanistan.
The Pakistani Air Force conducted airstrikes in Paktika and Khost on Monday. Following this, the Pakistani foreign ministry accused the Afghan Taliban of using TTP as a tool and stated that the airstrikes in Afghanistan were anti-terrorism operations.
In reaction to these airstrikes, the Taliban summoned Pakistan's ambassador to Kabul, Ubaid Ur Rehman Nizamani, and expressed their objections to the airstrike.
Zabihullah Mujahid, Taliban spokesperson has stated that in Pakistani airstrikes in Paktika, three women and three children were killed, and in Khost, three members of a family were killed.