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World Education Day: UNAMA Calls On Taliban To Immediately End Ban On Girls' Education

Jan 24, 2025, 17:01 GMT+0

On World Education Day, the United Nations Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) once again called on the Taliban to end the "tragedy" of banning education for millions of Afghan girls.

UNAMA said that Afghan girls have been deprived of their basic right to education since the past 1,225 days.

Roza Otunbayeva, head of UNAMA, has called the Taliban's ban on girls' education a tragedy for millions of Afghan girls.

She stressed that no country has made progress by leaving half of its population behind and that the Taliban should allow girls to return to school.

The United Nations Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) on Friday (January 24) said in a statement that the organisation is celebrating World Education Day with "deep regret and concern" for the millions of Afghan girls deprived of education.

"It is a blatant injustice and a tragedy that millions of Afghan girls have been deprived of their right to education. No country can ever prosper by disabling and abandoning half of its population."

According to the UNAMA statement, 1,225 days have passed since the Taliban closed girls' schools above the sixth grade to Afghan girls.

The ban on girls' education in schools above the sixth grade and university has been widely condemned domestically and internationally.

After banning girls' education, the Taliban has repeatedly said for more than three years that the move is "temporary" and has ignored calls for the reopening of schools.

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Quality, Gender-Free Education Essential For Afghanistan's Wellbeing, Says EU

Jan 24, 2025, 15:55 GMT+0

On the occasion of the International Day of Education, the European Union Delegation to Afghanistan said that high-quality, gender-free education is essential for Afghanistan's well-being and self-sufficiency.

The European Union wrote that education is a fundamental right for all and that the EU is working to ensure that Afghans have access to education.

The EU mission to Afghanistan wrote on Friday, January 24, that the EU stands in solidarity with all Afghans and supports Afghans' efforts to access the fundamental right to education and build a prosperous Afghanistan.

The European Union emphasised on the importance of quality education for all, regardless of gender, while Afghan girls and women above the sixth grade are deprived of any education in Afghanistan. After taking control of Afghanistan, the Taliban has closed all educational centres for girls.

Earlier, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said that Afghan girls have been deprived of their basic right to education for 1,225 days. The UN office once again called on the Taliban to end the "tragedy" of banning education for millions of Afghan girls.

Tawazon Media Started Its Activities Outside Afghanistan

Jan 24, 2025, 14:45 GMT+0

A number of Afghan journalists in exile announced the establishment and start of Tawazon Media.

The outlet announced that 70 percent of its activities will focus on covering human rights issues in Afghanistan.

Tawazon Media said in a statement on Friday, January 24, that the outlet was founded by journalists in exile and that its staff work voluntarily and without financial privileges.

According to this statement, Tawazon is an independent and impartial media outlet that currently operates digitally, through social networks and YouTube.

Tawazon Media announced that it is going to broadcast in Pashto, Persian and English. The outlet said that it would cover current humanitarian issues in Afghanistan with the help of its journalists in 20 provinces.

The outlet is run by a number of professional journalists in exile and is trying to address issues that have not been covered so far, the statement said.

CSTO To Launch Programme To Strengthen Tajikistan's Border With Afghanistan This Year

Jan 24, 2025, 13:47 GMT+0

Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) Secretary-General Imangali Tasmagambetov announced that the programme to strengthen Tajikistan's border with Afghanistan will begin in 2025.

The programme includes specific measures aimed at ensuring the security of CSTO member states, he said.

The Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) said in a statement that Tasmagambetov announced the achievements of the CSTO in 2024 and the plans for 2025 at a meeting in Moscow on Thursday, December 23.

The draft plan to strengthen Tajikistan's border with Afghanistan was studied and agreed upon by the CSTO countries in 2024.

Regional organisations, including the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO), have repeatedly expressed concern over the past three years about the risk of extremism spreading from Afghanistan to Central Asia.

According to the agreed plan, CSTO member states must determine the necessary resources to protect Tajikistan's border with Afghanistan.

In September 2024, Tasmagambetov said that there is a common understanding that peace and stability cannot be achieved without working together.

He also announced that documents have been signed to equip CSTO forces with modern and advanced weapons and military equipment.

According to Russian media, the plan to strengthen Tajikistan's border with Afghanistan has been designed in three phases and a five-year implementation period.

Earlier, representatives from more than 40 countries expressed concern over the growing spread of extremism, radical religious teachings and racial discrimination in various countries. At a meeting in Moscow, they warned that the situation could lead to catastrophic consequences.

Request For Arrest Warrants For Group’s Leaders Lack Legal Basis, Says Taliban

Jan 24, 2025, 12:23 GMT+0

In response to the request for an arrest warrant for the group’s leader and chief judge of the Supreme Court, the Taliban accused the International Criminal Court (ICC) of double standards.

The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry said that the request for arrest warrants for Hibatullah Akhundzada and Abdul Hakim Haqqani “lack a fair legal basis” and were “politically motivated”.

The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry responded almost a day after the ICC’s chief prosecutor announced his request for arrest warrants for Hibatullah Akhundzada and Abdul Hakim Haqqani.

The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying that the ICC prosecutor’s charges “like many other decisions of this institution, lack a fair legal basis, are double standards, and are politically motivated”.

ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan has charged Hibatullah Akhundzada and Abdul Hakim Haqqani with crimes against humanity for gender-based violence.

The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry said that it called the charges “baseless” and strongly condemned them.

The Taliban Foreign Ministry wrote on Friday, February 24, that the International Criminal Court had requested the arrest warrant for the group’s senior officials at a time when security in Afghanistan had been established under the group’s administration.

The ministry said that “private prisons, kidnappings, islands of power of warlords and many other tragedies and inhumane acts have disappeared”.

The Taliban accused the International Criminal Court of “turning a blind eye to war crimes and inhumane acts committed by foreign forces and their domestic allies” over the past 20 years.

The Taliban said that the court’s disregard for past incidents in Afghanistan had further weakened the institution’s credibility.

The Taliban Foreign Ministry said that the court should not try to impose its own interpretation of human rights on the world and ignore the religious and national values of other nations.

Book Bans Common Practice In Many Countries, Says Taliban Official

Jan 24, 2025, 11:12 GMT+0

Hayatullah Mohajir Farahi, the Taliban's Deputy Minister of Information and Culture, defended the group's ban on the distribution and publication of dozens of books, saying that banning books is a "common practice" in many countries.

Farahi added that the Taliban has banned some books in order to build a "single nation" in Afghanistan.

In an interview with the group's controlled national television, the Taliban official said that "all over the world" governments have adopted different methods regarding the ban on books.

In "neighbouring countries, Arab countries and even Europe", he said, books that contradict their values are banned.

"This issue is not limited to Afghanistan," Farahi said. “Throughout history as well as in the current world, it is a common occurrence that governments in some cases give themselves the right to ban certain books."

After coming to power in Afghanistan, the Taliban, along with imposing other restrictions on freedom of expression, have banned hundreds of books in the fields of politics, religion, art and culture, history, literature, and philosophy and collected them from libraries and bookstores.

The Taliban has called the books "undesirable" and "contrary to Afghan and Islamic values".

Critics of the Taliban, however, say that by removing books, the group seeks to strengthen the intellectual foundations of its ideology in society.