Taliban Spokesperson Says Group And Hamas Share Common Goal

In response to the news of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar's death, the spokesman for the Taliban's police command in Kabul said that the Taliban and Hamas share common aspirations.

In response to the news of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar's death, the spokesman for the Taliban's police command in Kabul said that the Taliban and Hamas share common aspirations.
In a note posted on the X social media network, Khalid Zadran called the Hamas leader a "hero" and congratulated him on his "martyrdom".
Khalid Zadran posted a photo showing the items inside the pocket of the Hamas member. In this picture, a bullet can be seen along with a rosary, some money, a flashlight, and a number of other items.
The Taliban spokesperson said that the items inside the pocket of the slain Hamas and Taliban members are the same as their ideals. "Mentos is used to reduce hunger and bad breath, and the mouth usually stinks when you're hungry. The rosary and a bullet show that this man fought only for the sake of God," he wrote.


Apple TV Plus, Apple's movie and series streaming service, announced that it will begin airing the documentary "Bread and Roses" on November 22 of this year.
The film, made by Afghan filmmaker Sahra Mani, explores the lives and struggles of some women in the early weeks after the Taliban took power in Afghanistan.
The documentary about the resilience of Afghan women under the Taliban's rule was also screened at the Cannes Film Festival last year.
Academy Award-winning actress Jennifer Lawrence is the producer of "Bread and Roses”.
The film was made by Excellent Cadaver, a film company that Jennifer Lawrence started in 2018 with her friend Justine Polsky.
In 2018, Sahra Mani, the director of this film, made another film called "A Thousand Girls Like Me" about Afghan women.
When the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, they imposed sweeping restrictions on women in the public and private spheres. A number of Afghan women protested against the Taliban's policies in different cities. The Taliban's response to the women's protests was to suppress, detain, and torture the protesters.

Shahriar Heidari, a member of the Iranian parliament's National Security Committee, called Afghan "unauthorised nationals" as "border invaders" on Iranian soil.
Heidari said that the number of undocumented Afghan nationals reached "two million", stressing that "their illegal presence is not acceptable in any way".
In an interview with Khabar Online, he said "We need at least six years to organise and evacuate the nationals from the country, although our emphasis is on Afghan nationals, but there are also Iraqi, Pakistani and Bangladeshi nationals in Iran."
The member of Iranian parliament added that some Afghan nationals who lived in Iraq for a long time and then came to Iran and stayed in Iran, do not have an Afghan, Iraqi or Iranian identity. He said that the situation of these nationals should also be clarified in Iran.
Heidari emphasised that regardless of any kind of attitude towards foreign nationals in Iran, these migrants should be "managed and controlled" with an intelligent system. He claimed that European countries monitor the behaviour of foreign nationals from the moment of arrival to departure by the security and intelligence services.
The Iranian official called undocumented Afghan immigrants in Iran "border aggressors" while the Islamic Republic has made living conditions extremely difficult for Afghan immigrants in Iran and has greatly increased the process of deportation of undocumented Afghans.
The Halvash Human Rights Organisation reported on Wednesday that Iranian border forces opened fire on a large group of Afghans who were trying to enter Iran, killing and wounding dozens of them. The report of the shooting of Afghan refugees has provoked the reaction of many international humanitarian organisations. These organisations have called for a transparent and comprehensive investigation into the matter.

Pakistan announced that it has imposed strict measures to prevent the issuance of national identity cards and Pakistani passports to Afghans.
Pakistan's Information Minister Attaullah Tarar has said that passport applicants in the country will be processed in three stages.
Tarar told the Pakistani House of Representatives on Thursday, October 17, that scanners and advanced devices will be used to improve the process of verifying the identities of individuals and prevent the issuance of fake Pakistani passports and ID cards to Afghans.
The Pakistani Information Minister added that the citizens of this country who want to get a Pakistani passport and national identity card should go through three steps.
Approval by a government official, family registration certificate, and re-verification of documents are the three steps that must be done, according to Ataullah Tarar.
According to Pakistani media reports, the forgery of documents, especially national identity cards and Pakistani passports, by Afghan immigrants is a serious issue in Pakistan, which has received attention in the last year after the start of the forced deportation of Afghans.
On August 29, the Pakistani government announced that it had revoked more than 6,000 illegal identity cards of Afghan immigrants in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
In December last year, Geo News quoted its sources as saying that the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government had decided to collect more than 58,000 suspicious ID cards and revoke fake Afghans' cards.

Maisam Mehdipour, the Iranian deputy ambassador for media affairs, denied that Iranian border forces were shooting at Afghan refugees.
He said that the area where the Afghan refugees were said to have been shot was a "security zone" and that migrants should not move around the area.
On Thursday, Mehdipour denied the shooting of immigrants in a programme on the social network X, saying that the "enemy" intends to divert public opinion by publishing news of the shooting of immigrants.
According to reports, Iranian border forces had opened fire on a group of migrants in the Kalgan-Saravan area, in Sistan and Baluchestan province on the border with Pakistan.
"Separatist groups have been using this area as a corridor for the killing of civilians for years," the Iranian official said.
'Taliban must respond'
Mehdipour said that unauthorised movement should not take place from this area and that Afghanistan and Pakistan should be held accountable.
Regarding the reason for the migration of Afghans to Iran, he said, "The Taliban must be held accountable for migration. The Taliban's policies against women and restrictions on citizens have led to migration," he said, adding, "The Islamic Republic is not accountable to immigrants. The Taliban must respond."
The Iranian official also criticised the statements of the former Afghan government officials for voicing condemnation about the killing of refugees.
Improving the economic situation, ensuring security and legitimate governance in Afghanistan will prevent the phenomenon of migration, he said. "People inside Afghanistan should feel that they can live in it," he said.
He says that the people of Afghanistan are suffering from unemployment.

The Taliban's Supreme Court announced on Thursday that it had sentenced eight people in Khost and six people, including two women, in Kabul to flogging.
The Taliban's Supreme Court wrote that it had punished these individuals on charges of sexual relations, forgery of documents, and bribery in public.
The Taliban's Supreme Court on Thursday, October 18, announced in separate statements the punishment of 14 people in Kabul and Khost province, writing that it had sentenced each of the seven individuals in Khost province with 35 lashes in public and sentenced each of them to one year in prison. The court said that it sentenced the eighth individual to 39 lashes and two years in prison.
The Taliban's Supreme Court earlier said that it had flogged six people, including two women, in Deh Sabz in Kabul on charges of extramarital affairs and same-sex relations. The court added that it sentenced the individuals to 39 lashes and to prison terms ranging from one year to one year and three months.
Despite the objections of international human rights organisations, the Taliban has continued to inflict corporal punishment and torture on defendants in public. The group's Supreme Court reports daily on public punishment of defendants across Afghanistan.
International human rights organisations have complained about the trial process of individuals by Taliban courts, criticising the defendants' lack of access to a lawyer and a fair trial.