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Shaheen Asks US Secretary Of State To Withdraw Warning Of Big Bounties On Taliban Leaders

Jan 27, 2025, 14:25 GMT+0

Suhail Shaheen, the Taliban's ambassador to Qatar, called on the new US Secretary of State Marco Rubio to withdraw the warning about more rewards on Taliban leaders.

Shaheen warned, "Everyone should learn from the jihad of the Afghan nation in the face of pressure and aggression in recent decades."

The warning came after the Secretary of State of US President Donald Trump announced that he would offer a much larger reward to Taliban leaders if reports that the Taliban are holding more American citizens than those set for Osama bin Laden, are true.

In response to this threat, Shaheen said that the policy of the Taliban government is to resolve issues peacefully through dialogue. He also warned that the Afghan nation's jihad in the face of pressures and aggressions in recent decades is a lesson to be learned.

This reaction came after two American citizens were exchanged for a Taliban member on the last day of the Biden administration.

However, two other Americans, George Glezmann and Mahmood Habibi, remain in Taliban custody.

After Donald Trump came to power, a Canadian citizen was also released from the Taliban's prison.

The Canadian Foreign Minister on Sunday announced the release of Canadian veteran David Lavery from Taliban custody with the mediation of Qatar. Without providing details or how he was released, she wrote on the social media platform X that she had spoken to Lavery and that he had arrived in Qatar.

Suhail Shaheen said that the release of the Canadian citizen from Afghan prisons was achieved through the mediation of the "friendly country of Qatar" and positive interactions with the Taliban.

Recalling the release of the Canadian citizen, Shaheen tried to encourage the new US secretary of state to engage with the group.

The new US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, wrote on social media platform X on Saturday, January 25, that it has been reported that the Taliban have taken more American citizens hostage than has been announced so far.

"If this is true, we should immediately put a very large bounty on the heads of senior Taliban leaders, perhaps even more than we had set for Osama bin Laden," Marco Rubio said.

The exact number of US citizens in Taliban prisons has not yet been announced.

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China Bans Imports Of Livestock Products From Afghanistan, Several Other Countries

Jan 27, 2025, 12:37 GMT+0

China announced that it has banned the import of sheep, goats and livestock products from Afghanistan, Palestine, Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh.

The decision was made due to concerns about the spread of diseases such as foot-and-mouth disease, sheep pox, and goat pox.

The ban, which covers African, Asian and European countries, comes after the World Health Organisation warned about the spread of animal diseases in various countries.

Foot-and-mouth disease and sheep pox are among the most dangerous animal diseases. Both diseases are mainly seen in African and Asian countries and have serious effects on other animals. Foot-and-mouth fever can lead to the death of animals in some cases.

Stanekzai Leaves Afghanistan After Taliban Leader Issues Arrest Warrant, Says Sources

Jan 27, 2025, 11:23 GMT+0

Afghanistan International sources reported that Abbas Stanekzai, the Taliban's deputy foreign minister, has left Afghanistan after Hibatullah Akhundzada issued an exit ban and arrest warrant against him.

According to these sources, Yaqoob Mujahid, the Taliban's defence minister, provided the conditions for his immediate visit to Dubai.

A well-informed source in Kabul said that after Abbas Stanekzai harshly criticised Hibatullah Akhundzada for banning girls' education, the Taliban leader ordered Abdul Haq Wasiq, the head of intelligence, to arrest Stanekzai and ban him from leaving the country.

After receiving the order, Wasiq contacted Defence Minister Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid, who is considered one of Abbas Stanekzai's main supporters in the Taliban structure.

According to these sources, the Taliban's defence minister asked him to leave Afghanistan immediately after learning of the Taliban leader's decision to arrest and ban Stanekzai from leaving Afghanistan.

The Taliban has not yet officially commented on the matter.

However, a source close to the Taliban's deputy foreign minister, in an interview with Afghanistan International, denied that "there is a dispute between Hibatullah and Stanekzai". The source said that Abbas Stanekzai had planned to publish a video about the incident, but was unable to do so due to the illness he suffered.

The source close to Stanekzai added that the Deputy Foreign Minister has asked Zia Ahmad Takal, the Deputy Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to take a position on this issue.

In a speech on Saturday, January 18, at the graduation ceremony of students of a religious school in Khost Province, Abbas Stanekzai, the Taliban's deputy foreign minister, said that the Taliban are "acting against Sharia" and have ignored the rights of 20 million of Afghanistan's population (women).

He stressed that the Taliban's decision to close schools and universities to girls has no religious basis, and that the ban is only Hibatullah Akhundzada's personal view.

Abbas Stanekzai's remarks about injustice against women have been widely reflected in the international media. Reuters called the comments one of the harshest public criticisms of the policy that has led to the Taliban's international isolation.

CNN also described Abbas Stanekzai's harsh remarks as "rare public criticism of the policies" of Hibatullah Akhundzada.

An analyst told CNN that Stanekzai's recent speech went beyond his previous criticisms. "Stanekzai has publicly called for a change in policies and questioned the legitimacy of the current approach," he said.

The Economist Times, referring to Stanekzai's previous criticisms, wrote that this time he addressed Hibatullah Akhundzada directly and asked him to change his policies.

Afghan Immigrants Can't Come To US Without Due Diligence, Says V-P JD Vance

Jan 27, 2025, 10:05 GMT+0

In an interview with CBS, US Vice-President JD Vance strongly defended Donald Trump's decision to suspend the Afghan refugee transfer programme.

He said that the files of some asylum seekers before entering the United States were not properly vetted from a security point of view, which has raised concerns.

In his first interview with the media since his inauguration, part of which aired on CBS News on Sunday, Vance was repeatedly asked about the suspension of the Afghan refugee repatriation programme and he strongly supported Trump's decision.

"I don't believe that all of these asylum seekers have been properly vetted," Trump's vice-president said. "There is evidence that some of these individuals were even planning to carry out terrorist attacks."

He pointed to the case of Nasir Ahmad Tawhedi, an Afghan immigrant living in Oklahoma who was accused of planning a terrorist attack on Election Day, and said that the case showed that the process of vetting asylum seekers was flawed.

Vance added, "Many of these asylum programmes have problems in terms of the quality of the review. We certainly can't let thousands of people into our country without asking."

The CBS anchor said that "these individuals have been investigated". But Trump's vice-president quipped, "Just like the same person who planned the terrorist attack in Oklahoma a few months ago? He was apparently properly screened."

He added that "a lot of people in the media and in the Democratic Party said that he was properly vetted," but "it is clear that this was not the case".

Vance continued, "I don't want my kids to live in a neighbourhood where these people [immigrants] haven't been properly vetted, and because I don't want that for my children, I don't want the kids of other Americans to have to accept that."

President Donald Trump's decision to suspend foreign aid and the US refugee programme has hampered the transfer of more than 40,000 Afghans to the United States. These people have gone through all the required procedures and are ready to fly to the United States.

The Trump administration's decision to suspend the programme has led to the cancellation of many refugee flights, leaving thousands of people in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Albania and Qatar in a precarious position. The cancellation of flights and the suspension of the evacuation of former US military colleagues have drawn sharp criticism from some lawmakers and human rights groups in the United States.

Meanwhile, the US State Department has suspended funding for organisations that help refugees with housing, employment and other needs. In a letter, the ministry said that these organisations should stop all their activities.

Donald Trump's tough immigration policies, which were part of his 2024 election campaign, have left the future of many of these Afghan refugees in doubt.

Girls' Education Is Not A Priority In Afghanistan, Says Mahmood Khan Achakzai

Jan 27, 2025, 09:06 GMT+0

Mahmood Khan Achakzai, the leader of Pakistan's Awami National Party, announced that he does not want to divide Pakistan, but if the country interferes in Afghanistan's affairs, he will confront it.

Referring to the Taliban's ban on girls' education, Achakzai said that in Afghanistan, there are more important problems than girls' education.

"We don't want to divide Pakistan, but if Pakistan interferes in Afghanistan and we have power, we will stop it," the leader of the Pakhtunkhwa Awami National Party (ANP) said at a gathering in Quetta on Sunday. We will not allow anyone to harm Afghanistan."

"Our party supports whoever is in power in Afghanistan," he added. "The Pakhtunkhwa Awami National Party will support anyone who strives to preserve the territorial integrity and freedom of Afghanistan."

Regarding girls' education, Achakzai said, "Afghanistan has big problems and other issues are prioritised over education. The liberation of Afghanistan and the establishment of a unified government are more important than anything else."

Referring to the Pakistani government's treatment of Afghan refugees, he said, "Pakistan should give birth certificates to those Afghan refugees who were born and raised in this country. If this is not done, we will go to international courts."

He stated that the freedom of Afghanistan is tied to the freedom of the Pashtuns of Pakistan, and reiterated that Pakistan is neither an Islamic nor a republic.

Mahmood Khan Achakzai criticised the Pakistani government's disregard for the rights of Pashtuns and said that Pashtuns should enjoy equal rights like other ethnic groups in Pakistan.

The Pashtun politician, who had close relations with politicians of the previous government in the past, has been accused of supporting the Taliban after the fall of the republican system in Afghanistan.

New Polio Vaccination Campaign To Launch Across 16 Afghan Provinces

Jan 26, 2025, 16:02 GMT+0

The “Polio-Free Afghanistan” organisation has announced the launch of a new polio vaccination campaign, set to begin on Monday, 27 January, across 16 provinces in Afghanistan.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Afghanistan recorded 25 cases of polio in 2024. However, the Taliban had previously claimed that no positive cases of the disease had been reported within the country.

In a statement released on Sunday, Polio-Free Afghanistan revealed that the campaign will be conducted in the provinces of Kandahar, Helmand, Uruzgan, Zabul, Paktia, Paktika, Khost, Ghazni, Nangarhar, Laghman, Kunar, Nuristan, Kabul, Baghlan, Herat, and Badghis.

The organisation, however, did not specify the duration of the campaign or the number of children expected to be vaccinated.

The WHO continues to stress the importance of vaccination campaigns in eradicating polio, particularly in regions like Afghanistan, where the disease remains a significant health concern.