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New Details Uncovered Regarding Abbas Stanekzai's Departure To United Arab Emirates

Jan 30, 2025, 11:44 GMT+0

Three reliable sources told Afghanistan International that they met Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai, the Taliban's deputy foreign minister, in the city of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (UAE). He was supposed to be arrested and hence, left Kabul.

Other sources had previously said that Stanekzai was supposed to be tried in a military court.

According to sources, the purpose of the trial was to send a warning message to other officials who are dissatisfied with Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada's decrees, especially regarding the ban on women's education.

Many Kabul-based Taliban officials oppose dozens of Kandahar decrees.

According to information provided by these sources to Afghanistan International, Mullah Baradar, Sirajuddin Haqqani, and Mawlawi Yaqoob asked Hibatullah Akhundzada to pardon Stanekzai, but the Taliban leader strongly opposed this request and insisted that he should be imprisoned.

However, after extensive consultations and indirect interventions by some senior Taliban officials, Stanekzai finally boarded the plane and left Afghanistan for the United Arab Emirates for the time being, the sources said.

However, he and his supporters within the Taliban government are trying to pave the way for a return and reconciliation, sources say.

In an audio file provided to Afghanistan International on Monday, the Taliban's deputy foreign minister said that he had been "infected with a coronavirus-like disease" and that was why he had "gone to recuperate".

In the audio file, he did not mention that he left Afghanistan and went to Dubai for fear of arrest, but accused the media of spreading "false propaganda" in this regard.

Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai is one of the few officials in the Taliban government who openly criticised Hibatullah Akhundzada's policies. He had repeatedly taken a position on the Taliban's severe restrictions on Afghan women and girls.

In his last speech, he accused the Taliban of violating all women's rights and said that the group has committed oppression and injustice against 20 million women and girls in Afghanistan.

Stanekzai's departure comes as tensions and internal disagreements within the Taliban leadership over key issues, including women's education, have risen to an unprecedented level.

Some political analysts believe that these differences may lead to deeper fissures in the Taliban's structure, especially as some of the group's leaders try to adopt a more moderate approach to international pressure. However, it is said that the hardline faction led by Hibatullah Akhundzada is not ready to back down.

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Democrats In Congress Call For Resumption Of Afghan Refugees To US

Jan 30, 2025, 09:58 GMT+0
Democrats In Congress Call For Resumption Of Afghan Refugees To US
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A number of prominent Democratic figures in the US Congress have written a letter to the new US Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, asking Washington to resume the programme of transferring Afghan refugees to the United States.

They also called for the continuation of services to Afghan refugees in the United States.

On his first day in office, US President Donald Trump issued an executive order suspending the programme for accepting asylum seekers and foreign aid.

With the suspension of the programme, thousands of Afghans awaiting hearing in various countries, including Pakistan and Albania, are left without a fate.

In addition, government services, such as financial and food assistance, to Afghans who have been transferred to the United States have also been affected by the order.

The US secretary of state has ordered resettlement agencies to halt their programmes, and federal funding to these organisations has been suspended. This comes as Trump said at the signing of the new immigration deportation law that he is quite serious about getting illegal immigrants out of the country.

Democratic members of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees on Wednesday sent a letter to their former Senate colleague Marco Rubio urging him to use his influence to lift the suspension of resettlement services for Afghan refugees. The lawmakers argued that these services would help refugees live in the United States.

In addition, they said that this type of assistance to eligible refugees does not fall into the category of foreign assistance because it is provided to people inside the United States, not outside the country.

They also pointed to the 32,000 Afghan refugees who will be transferred to the United States in 2025 through the Refugee Admissions Programme who are still eligible for government assistance.

"The cease-and-desist order violates the legal obligations that the State Department has fulfilled under its contracts with US-based organisations," the Democratic lawmakers said.

The suspension of government aid "exposes Afghan refugees to homelessness and food insecurity", they said with concern.

The Trump administration is reviewing all federal loans and assistance to domestic agencies, including resettlement agencies.

The US government has also said that Afghan refugees who were former US government partners in Afghanistan have not been properly screened. Therefore, Washington has "temporarily" suspended their transfer programme.

Pakistani Police Intensifies Detention Of Afghan Migrants In Islamabad

Jan 30, 2025, 09:08 GMT+0
Pakistani Police Intensifies Detention Of Afghan Migrants In Islamabad
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Afghan refugees in Islamabad, Pakistan, alleged that the country's police have intensified the detention of refugees after a few days.

According to the migrants, police have arrested Afghan migrants since Tuesday in different areas of Islamabad, including Barakahu.

Sources from Islamabad's Barakahu area said on Thursday, January 30, that Pakistani police "intensified" searches of migrant homes at 9am and arrested a number of undocumented migrants, including women and children.

An Afghan refugee who was held in police custody for an hour told Afghanistan International that police had "beaten up" the arrested women. A female migrant who was trying to contact her family was seized by the police officials and severely beaten after a verbal altercation, she said.

Another refugee sent videos to Afghanistan International and said that the Islamabad police arrested a number of migrants, including his brother, from the Mandi Mor area of the city on Wednesday evening and transferred them to Haji Camp in Rawalpindi.

He said that the Pakistani police slapped him because of the filming. According to the woman, Pakistani police have also arrested migrants who had UNHCR cards with them.

Pakistani police have intensified arrests of Afghan refugees in the cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi for the past month. These arrests had decreased in the past week and have intensified again in the last two days.

Taliban Has Turned Afghanistan Into Islamic North Korea, Says Former French Ambassador

Jan 29, 2025, 16:19 GMT+0
Taliban Has Turned Afghanistan Into Islamic North Korea, Says Former French Ambassador
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David Martinon, the former French ambassador to Afghanistan, has stated that the Taliban has turned Afghanistan into an "Islamic North Korea".

Martinon added that he is not optimistic about a change in the situation in Taliban-dominated Afghanistan in the short term.

In an interview with a newspaper about the documentary "The Collapse of Kabul", Martinon said that the Taliban is in full control of Afghanistan today and there is no serious internal opposition against it except for ISIS-K, which is a bloodthirsty group.

The documentary is an adaptation of David Martinon's book titled "The 15 Days That Transformed Kabul".

The French diplomat, who is now France's ambassador to South Africa, added that the Taliban's opponents, including Ahmad Massoud, are facing difficulties.

In a part of the interview, he said, "The Taliban has created fear inside the country. They are cruel and have made women's living conditions even more difficult. Women no longer have access to public spaces, education and medical education. Even in their homes, they are not allowed to have windows facing out. There is no better description of this situation of women and girls as domestic slavery."

He considered the fall of Kabul not only a defeat for the democratic international community, but also for the Afghan political class, adding, "After 20 years of efforts and investment, Afghanistan has not been able to achieve independence and stability."

Martinon also recalled the difficult days before the withdrawal from Kabul and said that the French embassy team had carried out the evacuation operations accurately and quickly in anticipation of the fall of the government.

He described tough decisions, such as opening the embassy doors to rescue hundreds of Afghans at risk, as one of the most critical moments of his mission.

The French-titled documentary "Kabul Chaos", written and directed by Thomas Brémond, David Périssère, Nils Montel & Myriam Weil, recounts the events of Martinon and his team's three-year mission in Kabul until their departure in August 2021.

The documentary, which was made using various archives and interviews, is scheduled to be broadcast on January 31.

David Martinon said that Afghanistan has been plunged into darkness under Taliban rule and has an uncertain future, but he still hopes that one day the French diplomatic mission in Afghanistan will be resumed.

Shock To Afghan Economy: Taliban Stops Payment To Govt Employees & Supply Procurement

Jan 29, 2025, 15:02 GMT+0
Shock To Afghan Economy: Taliban Stops Payment To Govt Employees & Supply Procurement
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Following the suspension of US aid, the Taliban administration has informed all government employees that the payment of their monthly salaries has been suspended for three months.

This is the latest move by the Taliban to curb the pressure instigated after the cut off of US aid to Afghanistan.

Three employees of various government departments of the Taliban have informed Afghanistan International that the authorities have officially informed them that their salaries will not be paid in the next three months.

The Taliban has also banned logistical procurement.

Immediately after entering the White House, US President Donald Trump suspended all foreign aid, including sending money to Afghanistan, for three months.

The suspension of US aid has disrupted Afghanistan's relative economic stability, leaving the Taliban confused in the face of financial challenges, including a sharp devaluation of the Afghani.

The US State Department said on Sunday that the US government should focus more on its national interests.

"President Trump has made it clear that if foreign aid does not benefit the American people, the country will no longer blindly distribute money," the department's statement said. "Reviewing foreign aid is a moral duty of the government."

Abdul Latif Nazari, the Taliban's deputy minister of economy, said that following the suspension of US aid to Afghanistan, the activities of 50 international aid organisations in 28 provinces of the country have been suspended. Abdul Latif Nazari called on the countries of the world to separate humanitarian aid from political issues.

He said that the reason for the halt of the work of these organisations was the suspension of aid from the United States of America.

The suspension of US aid has caused volatility in Afghanistan's foreign exchange market.

Until recently, one dollar was traded at 69 afghanis in the Kabul foreign exchange market, but now one dollar has crossed the 80 afghani mark.

Taliban’s PM Imposes New Restrictions On Use Of Dollars

Jan 29, 2025, 14:28 GMT+0
Taliban’s PM Imposes New Restrictions On Use Of Dollars
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Following the suspension of US aid and the devaluation of the Afghani, the Taliban's prime minister made it mandatory to use the Afghani currency in transactions. Previously, the Taliban had banned the use of foreign currencies.

The Taliban's prime minister's office said in a statement, "No one can transfer more than $5,000 through airports and more than $500 through land borders."
The Taliban has also banned the entry of foreign currencies into Afghanistan and banned the transfer of dollars abroad.

The Taliban has also once again emphasised on preventing the smuggling of currency, gold, and historical artifacts.

In a statement issued by the Taliban's Prime Minister's Office on Monday, January 27, it was stated that violators will be imprisoned from 10 days to one year, depending on the amount of foreign currency transfers.

According to this order, the transfer of $1 million is considered to be one year in prison, and for lesser amounts, for every $100,000, one month in prison.

The statement also said that the money and gold seized from the "violators" will be kept in the Central Bank of Afghanistan until the Prime Minister's decision is made.
In recent days, with the sharp decline in the value of the Afghani currency against the dollar, the Central Bank offered millions of dollars to the market, and the group also closed the foreign exchange markets to control the price.

However, the value of the Afghani currency continues to depreciate against the dollar.

After the suspension of US aid, the dollar against the Afghani crossed the 80 Afghani mark.

This comes as a while ago, one dollar was traded at 69 afghanis in the Kabul foreign exchange market.