Afghanistan Snowfall Kills At Least 61, Say Taliban Officials

The death toll from three days of heavy snowfall across Afghanistan has risen to 61, with 110 people injured, a Taliban disaster management spokesperson said.

The death toll from three days of heavy snowfall across Afghanistan has risen to 61, with 110 people injured, a Taliban disaster management spokesperson said.
Mohammad Yousuf Hammad said Saturday that at least 458 homes were destroyed by snow and rain, and 360 families have been affected over the past three days.
The severe weather has impacted residents in multiple provinces, including Kabul, Parwan, Panjshir, Bamyan, Daikundi, Maidan Wardak, Ghazni, Herat, Ghor, Badghis, Balkh, Faryab, Sar-e Pol, Samangan and Nuristan, he said.


More than 2 million adolescent girls in Afghanistan are being denied access to secondary education, the United Nations said on the International Day of Education.
The agency warned that the continued restrictions will undermine both the future of girls and the country’s development and stability.
UNICEF and UNESCO said in a joint statement Saturday that Afghanistan is the only country in the world where secondary and higher education for women and girls are effectively banned.
The agencies called for urgent, collective action and greater international investment in education to ensure what they described as full, safe and inclusive access to learning for all.
The UN General Assembly has designated January 24 as the International Day of Education.
For nearly four and a half years, secondary schools have remained closed to girls in Afghanistan, and women and girls are still barred from attending universities. At the same time, the higher education system has been weakening amid university closures and the migration or marginalisation of lecturers and students.
Suhyon Kim, head of UNESCO’s office in Afghanistan, said: “When girls are denied access to education, a nation pays the price. Strengthening foundational learning and supporting female teachers are vital investments for Afghanistan’s recovery and resilience.”
Tajudeen Oyewale, UNICEF’s representative in Afghanistan, said: “Afghanistan urgently needs female teachers, nurses, community health workers and doctors. In a situation where women can only be treated by women, who will care for sick girls and women in the future if girls are deprived of education today?”
The agencies urged immediate action to protect the right to education in Afghanistan.

Representatives from about 20 European Union member states travelled to Kabul last week for talks on deporting asylum seekers to Afghanistan, Belgium’s state broadcaster reported Saturday.
Europe is seeking to resume the return of rejected asylum applicants, undocumented migrants and convicted criminals to Afghanistan, according to the report by Belgian broadcaster BRF.
The broadcaster said Freddy Roosemont, head of Belgium’s Office of Foreigners, was part of the delegation and flew to Kabul alongside representatives from other European countries.
The European Union has opened discussions with the Taliban aimed at facilitating deportations. European governments are seeking to establish a working arrangement under which the Taliban authorities would confirm that people deported from Europe are Afghan nationals.
Belgium’s Ministry of Asylum and Migration said the Taliban told the European delegation it was ready to cooperate in verifying the identities of those facing deportation.

Donald Trump said the role of NATO forces in the war in Afghanistan has been exaggerated, claiming allied troops stayed behind US soldiers and away from front-line fighting.
Speaking Thursday on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Trump told Fox News: “We’ve never needed them. We have never really asked anything of them. You know, they’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan, or this or that. And they did, they stayed a little back, a little off the front lines.”
Trump also voiced scepticism that NATO members would come to the United States’ defence if Washington were ever in need.
The remarks prompted strong reactions from several allied leaders and officials.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer described the comments as “insulting and appalling”, noting that 457 British service personnel were killed during the Afghanistan war. In a video posted on his account on X, Starmer said the remarks had hurt the families of those killed as well as the wider British public.
Al Carns, the UK armed forces minister, also pushed back, saying British forces served on the front lines in Afghanistan and often beyond.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk responded earlier by urging that Trump be reminded of Polish soldiers who were killed in Afghanistan.
In the United States, former national security adviser John Bolton described Trump’s comments as an attack on NATO. Writing on X, Bolton said: “Trump is embarrassing the American people by his attacks on NATO allies that fought with us in Afghanistan, not to mention justifiably outraging the allies.”
The White House, responding to the criticism, said: “President Trump is right.”

Rosemary DiCarlo, the United Nations under-secretary-general for political and peacebuilding affairs, has arrived in Afghanistan and is expected to hold talks with Taliban officials in Kabul, sources told Afghanistan International.
UN Secretary-General spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said earlier that DiCarlo’s visit is aimed at following up on the Doha process, a UN-led diplomatic track focused on Afghanistan.
Her arrival coincides with the International Day of Education. For nearly four and a half years, the Taliban have barred girls from attending secondary school, and Afghan women and girls remain excluded from universities.
The Doha process, led by the United Nations, was established to create a political framework for dialogue between the international community, regional countries and the Taliban to address Afghanistan’s political, security and humanitarian crises.
Three rounds of the Doha process have been held so far. The most recent meeting was led by DiCarlo, with Taliban representatives in attendance.
DiCarlo previously visited Kabul several months after the Taliban returned to power in 2021. At the end of that three-day trip, she said the United Nations remained committed to the people of Afghanistan and would continue to support their efforts to build an inclusive, just and peaceful society.

A senior adviser to Uzbekistan’s president says the country joined the peace initiative launched by Donald Trump primarily over security concerns, including fears about the spread of extremism from Afghanistan.
Abdulaziz Kamilov, the Uzbek president’s foreign policy adviser, told state broadcaster Uzbekistan 24 that developments in the Middle East are directly linked to Afghanistan’s security situation and could have consequences for Central Asia.
He said that following the outbreak of conflict and war in the Middle East, extremist groups and movements relocated to Afghanistan, adding that some of these groups have links to Central Asia.
Explaining Uzbekistan’s decision to join the Trump-led initiative, Kamilov said the move was driven mainly by security considerations and aligns with the country’s national interests.
According to Kamilov, the goals and mission of the initiative are consistent with the core principles of Uzbekistan’s foreign policy. He said Tashkent has important interests in the region tied to national, regional and global security.
The Uzbek official said his country closely monitors developments in the Middle East, particularly threats linked to extremism. He added that some Uzbek citizens had joined extremist groups in the region and later attempted to cause problems after returning home. However, he said authorities facilitated their return and created conditions for their social reintegration and a fresh start.
Kamilov said this humanitarian approach has been praised by the United Nations and could serve as a model for other countries.
He again linked developments in the Middle East to Afghanistan’s security, saying that before the conflict there were no extremist or terrorist organisations in Afghanistan, but such groups emerged after the war as they moved in from the Middle East.
Kamilov stressed that coordinated international cooperation is essential to counter these threats.
Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev signed an agreement with Trump on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos to establish the peace initiative. The agreement was concluded in the presence of representatives from Middle Eastern countries, South America, two European countries and the South Caucasus.
Trump initially designed the initiative to help end the war in Gaza and later expanded its scope, a move some world leaders have criticised as undermining the United Nations.
Kyrgyzstan has also joined the initiative.