US Special Representative Discusses Afghanistan With Japanese Officials

Rina Amiri, the US Special Representative for Afghan Women, Girls & Human Rights, announced that she met Japanese officials and discussed about Afghanistan.

Rina Amiri, the US Special Representative for Afghan Women, Girls & Human Rights, announced that she met Japanese officials and discussed about Afghanistan.
Amiri expressed gratitude to Japan for its support of education and development in Afghanistan during the meeting at the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).
She wrote on X social media platform that she looks forward to continuing discussions on expanding opportunities, especially for Afghan women.
Amiri also mentioned that she has discussed the current situation in Afghanistan with Akiko Horiba, Director of the Asia Peace Initiative Department in the Sasakawa Peace Foundation.


The Taliban's ombudsmen from the Ministry of Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice hindered women from accessing Gulghondi Hill, a recreational area in Parwan province during the Eid festivities.
According to a source, the Taliban subjected women to "degrading and humiliating treatment”.
The reliable source told Afghanistan International that the Taliban harassed and mistreated women despite their adherence to the hijab and the presence of a male guardian.
The source further remarked, "Taliban officials had very contemptuous behaviour and resorted to insults and vulgar language, particularly directed at women."
Gulghondi Hill, situated north of Kabul near Charikar city in Parwan province, traditionally attracts families during the spring season and on Eid and Nowruz occasions.
The Taliban have enforced a ban prohibiting women from visiting parks and recreational areas. They also prevented women from entering Gulghondi Hill last spring.

Bakhtar News Agency reported that the Taliban carried out an operation in Kunar province, in eastern Afghanistan, killing "two ISIS members”.
The state-controlled news agency under Taliban control released a report on Thursday stating that another "ISIS member" was arrested during this operation.
No further information regarding the identities of these individuals has been released yet.
Quoting officials from the Taliban's press office in Kunar province, Bakhtar News Agency reported that the operation was launched on Wednesday night in the Dewgal Valley of Choki district.
Two firearms were discovered and confiscated during the confrontation.

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the leader of Hezb-e-Islami party of Afghanistan, in his Eid message, said that Afghanistan is yet to achieve full freedom and independence, and the country's airspace is still under the control of the United States.
According to Hekmatyar, Afghans and people around the world believe that the dollar packages coming from the US is the price of buying Afghanistan's airspace.
However, he emphasised that "we must prove this accusation wrong”.
He referred to the American dollar packages as "poison bags" and said that "sinister intentions" are hidden behind them.
The leader of Hezb-e-Islami urged the Taliban to refuse the cash packages from the US because, in his view, this money does not validate "our faith and integrity”.
In a statement released on Wednesday, from addresses close to Hekmatyar, it has been stated that US unmanned aircrafts continue to roam the Afghan airspace and carry out reckless attacks, and the Taliban are powerless to control them.
Request for Compensation from the US
In his new statement, Hekmatyar wrote that the Taliban should have demanded compensation from the US in the Doha Agreement for the destruction of Afghanistan and the killing of one million Afghans.
According to him, instead of such a demand, it has been stated in the Doha Agreement that "US will assist in the reconstruction of Afghanistan”.
He further added that any kind of political interaction with America must be conditional on paying compensation.
Siege of the US Embassy and Expulsion of American Diplomats
In his Eid message, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar also stated that if the US does not end the "occupation of Afghanistan," the embassy of the country in Kabul should be besieged, and all Americans, including embassy staff, should be expelled from Afghanistan.
This is while the US has not confirmed the reopening of its embassy in Kabul in official statements.

The Human Rights Watch (HRW) has reported that after two and a half years of systematic abuses against women and girls, the Taliban has become bolder in its attacks against women.
Citing the resumption of stoning women to death, the organisation said that the Taliban is imposing abusive moral and social norms on Afghan women.
On Wednesday, HRW wrote on X social media platform expressing concerns that the Taliban's adoption of one abusive policy after another has brought them to their current position, largely due to a lack of accountability from the international community.
HRW emphasised on the importance of governments holding the Taliban responsible for severe violations of women's and girls' rights, urging actions such as filing cases under the women’s rights convention in the International Court of Justice.
The organisation also warned that if these unchecked abuses persist, even more, severe crimes may follow.
Rina Amiri, the US Special Envoy for Afghan Women, Girls, and Human Rights, previously warned that without global support for Afghan women, women's rights everywhere are at risk.
On April 9, 2023, the UN Women’s Office stated that excluding Afghan women from decision-making processes deprives Afghanistan of crucial opportunities to emerge from the crisis.
Over the past two and a half years, women in Afghanistan have been denied fundamental rights such as education, employment, sports, travel, visiting parks, and freely walking in the streets.

General Asim Munir, Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, visited border areas near Afghanistan on the first day of Eid al-Fitr.
The Pakistani Army's public relations office stated on Wednesday that Munir assessed the operational readiness of the army and the security situation along the borders with Afghanistan.
The army chief traveled to Miranshah and Spinwam areas in North Waziristan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which are in the vicinity of the Khost province of Afghanistan.
This marks the first visit by Pakistan’s Chief of Staff following the country's airstrikes on Khost and Paktika provinces of Afghanistan.
Pakistan’s air force conducted airstrikes on Paktika and Khost in the early morning of March 18. According to Pakistan, the target of the airstrikes was Pakistani Taliban militants on Afghan soil.
Despite Afghan Taliban being called allies in Islamabad, Pakistan's security concerns about the activities of Pakistani militant groups in Afghanistan have increased following the Taliban's takeover of power in Afghanistan.