
Aziza Akrami, an entrepreneur and human rights advocate, has been named Afghanistan’s Youth Representative to the United Nations, becoming the fifth young Afghan to hold the role, organisers said.
The position, awarded annually through a competitive process run by a civil society group, resumed this year after a three-year pause following the collapse of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan in August 2021.
Akrami was chosen from three finalists, Fatema Forotan, Wazhma Rahmani and Akrami, in a speech competition held on 11 September in The Hague. Previous youth representatives include Ramiz Bakhtiar, Aisha Khurram, Shukla Zadran and Ahmad Fawad Shahanyar.
Akrami is a co-founder of Empowered Circle, an organisation that has delivered health and education services to more than 8,000 women and children in underserved areas of Afghanistan since 2021.
Organisers said her work as both an entrepreneur and a human rights defender helped secure her selection for the role.
A senior Taliban official visited India last week in what Indian media described as a rare sign of growing engagement between New Delhi and the group.
The Taliban’s deputy health minister travelled to attend a health services and pharmaceutical exhibition, according to Indian outlets. The Times of India reported that the trip took place ahead of a possible visit later this year by Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, which could further strengthen ties between India and the Taliban.
The paper said India is working to facilitate Muttaqi’s visit and has been consulting with the UN Security Council about lifting his travel ban. Unlike Muttaqi, the deputy health minister is not subject to UN sanctions and therefore did not require approval to travel.
Suhail Shaheen, head of the Taliban’s political office in Qatar, told the Times of India that high-level visits at the foreign minister level were necessary to pave the way for broader cooperation, including trade.
The outreach comes as tensions rise between the Taliban and Pakistan. Islamabad has accused both the Taliban and India of backing Baloch separatists and the Pakistani Taliban to destabilise the country.
Meanwhile, on Friday, sources told Afghanistan International that the Taliban had expelled an Indian diplomat accused of meeting opposition groups abroad. A Taliban spokesperson denied the claim, saying the diplomat’s assignment had simply ended and that no expulsion had taken place.
The German government is in discussions with Pakistan to allow the return of Afghan nationals who were deported despite having been approved for resettlement in Germany, German media reported.
The newspaper Junge Freiheit said more than 600 Afghans slated for relocation to Germany had been detained in Pakistan, with about 250 of them already sent back to Afghanistan.
According to the report, Pakistan has detained 661 Afghans since mid-August, deporting 248 of them. Among those affected were 51 former local employees of Germany, 124 people accepted under Germany’s special admission programme, and 73 others in separate resettlement schemes.
Germany’s Interior and Foreign Ministries said deportations had been stopped in more than 300 cases, with those individuals still in Pakistan.
Meanwhile, more than 200 deported Afghans who had previously received guarantees of entry to Germany have appealed to Berlin in a letter, urging immediate action to protect their lives. They said they are living in fear of the Taliban after being returned to Afghanistan.
A spokesperson for Germany’s Foreign Ministry stressed that each case is subject to an “individual review,” adding that entry would not be granted if there were security concerns.
At present, more than 2,000 Afghans approved under official German relocation programmes remain in Pakistan, awaiting flights to Germany.
The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry said an Indian diplomat recently recalled from Kabul had not been expelled but had simply completed his mission.
The ministry said Harish Kumar, a senior Indian diplomat, was not declared “persona non grata,” contradicting earlier reports that he had been forced out over alleged contacts with Taliban opponents.
India’s Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions states that diplomatic postings abroad are typically for three years and may be extended. Records reviewed by Afghanistan International show Kumar’s diplomatic passport, number D1156181, was issued on 15 September 2023. His visa indicated that his first entry into Afghanistan was on 24 May 2025, meaning his stay lasted less than three months, around 85 days, before his departure.
Sources in Kabul earlier told Afghanistan International that the Taliban expelled Kumar on 17 August for meeting with anti-Taliban figures and attempting to organise them. They said the Taliban labelled him “persona non grata” and forced him to leave the country.
Kumar had been posted to Kabul after the fall of Afghanistan’s previous government, serving as both a diplomat and an officer with India’s external intelligence agency.
According to the sources, he had held talks with opposition leaders during trips to Delhi and Qatar about convening a meeting in Islamabad. They added that Kumar also explored the possibility of organising a similar gathering in Qatar or Dubai, noting that Delhi was dissatisfied with the prospect of such a meeting being held in Islamabad.
The United Nations refugee agency warned Friday that it is running out of resources to support millions of Afghans returning from neighbouring countries and appealed for $258 million in urgent funding.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said about 2.6 million Afghans have returned, many through forced deportations, and described the situation as a “crisis within a crisis.” The agency noted that local communities are still reeling from the impact of recent earthquakes while facing a surge in returnees from Pakistan.
According to UNHCR, Pakistan has expelled more than 554,000 Afghan migrants since April, including 143,000 in August alone. In the first week of September, more than 100,000 Afghans returned.
The agency urged Pakistan to extend the legal stay of vulnerable Afghans, pointing to the country’s long record of hosting refugees.
UNHCR also confirmed it has suspended some operations in Afghanistan after the Taliban barred female staff from entering its offices. It stressed that aid for women cannot be delivered without female employees and called for the immediate lifting of restrictions.
The agency warned that without fresh funding, it will be unable to continue delivering life-saving assistance to returnees.
The Taliban have confirmed that a delegation of their diplomats travelled to Europe for talks on Afghan refugees, humanitarian aid and the future of Afghanistan’s diplomatic missions, sources told Afghanistan International on Friday.
The delegation included Abdul Qahar Balkhi, spokesperson for the Taliban’s Foreign Ministry.
Radio Hurriyat, a Taliban-linked outlet, reported that the five-member team visited Austria, where they held discussions with the Interior and Foreign Ministries on Afghanistan’s diplomatic representation.
The outlet said the delegation also travelled to Switzerland and Germany in recent weeks, meeting officials to discuss similar issues. Taliban authorities have not commented publicly on the visits.
In late July, Balkhi confirmed that the Taliban had cooperated with the German government on deportations of Afghan refugees, a process he said was facilitated by Qatar. He added that further talks were planned to ensure “transparent and standard consular services” for Afghans living in Germany.
Germany’s Foreign Ministry confirmed to Afghanistan International in early August that Taliban diplomats had entered the country and would begin work after completing administrative procedures. The ministry said the move was intended to meet the consular needs of Afghans in Germany.
In late August, Swiss state television reported that four Taliban diplomats had travelled to Geneva to help identify Afghan nationals convicted of crimes.