Taliban Ask Russia To Investigate Pakistan Attack On Kabul

The Taliban’s envoy to Qatar, Suhail Shaheen, says the group wants Russia to investigate Pakistan’s alleged attack on a medical center in Kabul and assist victims.

The Taliban’s envoy to Qatar, Suhail Shaheen, says the group wants Russia to investigate Pakistan’s alleged attack on a medical center in Kabul and assist victims.
According to Russian media, Shaheen said Moscow could send a team to examine the incident and provide support to those affected. He added that Russia is capable of drawing appropriate international attention to the incident.
Earlier, Zamir Kabulov, Russia’s special envoy for Afghanistan, said Moscow was concerned about worsening relations between Pakistan and the Taliban and was ready to act as a mediator if requested by both sides.
Clashes have broken out between Taliban border forces and Pakistani troops in Khost province as talks between the two sides continue in Urumqi, China, local sources say.
Subhanullah Azzam, the Taliban’s head of information and culture in Khost, said the fighting took place in the Ghulam Khan area of Gurbuz district.
No details have yet been released about possible casualties or damage. However, local sources reported that gunfire was also heard in border areas of Alisher, Tirazayi and Zazi Maidan districts.
The clashes come as China seeks to bring Pakistan and the Taliban to the negotiating table. Sources say Beijing aims to reduce tensions, reopen trade routes and potentially secure a ceasefire.
Uzbekistan also called on Pakistan on Thursday to continue negotiations with the Taliban.
The Taliban disaster authority says at least three people have died and 16 were injured in flooding over the past 24 hours, bringing the death toll from four days of floods across Afghanistan to 51.
Yousuf Hammad, spokesperson for the Taliban’s disaster management authority, said on Thursday, April 2, in a video that heavy rain and flooding had continued over the past 24 hours in 18 provinces.
He said the rainfall had caused floods that completely destroyed 348 homes, while a further 798 houses were damaged.
Flooding also damaged 244 kilometres of roads and 3,048 hectares of agricultural land across various provinces. According to the authority, 201 families have been displaced.
The provinces affected include Kabul, Panjshir, Paktika, Khost, Logar, Maidan Wardak, Ghazni, Kandahar, Zabul, Uruzgan, Herat, Faryab, Badghis, Jawzjan, Baghlan, Badakhshan, Nangarhar and Laghman.
The Taliban Foreign Ministry says a mid-level delegation has travelled to Urumqi, China, for talks with Pakistan, with discussions set to begin under Chinese mediation.
Abdul Qahar Balkhi, spokesperson for the Taliban Foreign Ministry, said in a statement on Thursday, April 2, that the talks are being held at China’s request and based on mutual respect and constructive engagement with Pakistan.
He said the Taliban delegation would take part based on a balanced and principled approach and intends to hold comprehensive and responsible discussions with the other side on good neighbourly relations, strengthening trade ties and the effective management of security issues.
Balkhi added that the Taliban believe diplomatic engagement grounded in mutual respect, non-interference and constructive understanding can provide practical and lasting solutions to existing issues with Pakistan and help create conditions for stability and cooperation in the region.
At the same time, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson said a delegation of senior officials had been sent to Urumqi for talks with the Afghan Taliban. He said the delegation is there to explore a sustainable solution to cross-border terrorism from Afghanistan.
Informed sources in the Taliban Foreign Ministry told Afghanistan International on Wednesday that the group had sought China’s help to bring Pakistan to the negotiating table.
Local sources in Herat say the Taliban have detained influential Shia cleric Hussein Azimi in Jebrail township and taken him to an unknown location, with no information on his fate or the reason for his arrest.
Sources said Azimi, imam of the Sayyid al-Shuhada Mosque in Jebrail and a member of Herat’s Shia Ulema Council, was detained on Wednesday afternoon before prayers by Taliban intelligence and morality police officers.
There is still no information about his whereabouts, and his relatives have been unable to contact him.
Azimi had previously been arrested by the Taliban in late 2024.
It is reported that his earlier detention, after which he was released on bail following mediation by community elders, was linked to his protest against Taliban restrictions on Ashura ceremonies.
Sources in Herat also said the Taliban have recently detained several other Shia clerics for holding Eid prayers.
Previously, the Taliban had forced people in various provinces to observe Eid prayers a day earlier in line with the group’s announcement.
Russia’s transport minister, Andrey Nikitin, has described Uzbekistan as a key partner in developing relations with the Taliban, highlighting cooperation on regional transport projects.
Speaking at a press conference in St Petersburg on Wednesday, April 1, he said Uzbekistan is Russia’s partner within the Commonwealth of Independent States and an important partner in developing ties with Afghanistan. "We are building a partnership to develop the Afghan-Trans corridor," he said.
The Russian official added that there are many projects in Uzbekistan and Russia expects its companies to take part in them. Nikitin specifically referred to the Afghan-Trans railway project.
Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev had earlier signed an international agreement on a feasibility study for the Afghan-Trans railway project.
The agreement outlines a framework for a regional transport corridor linking Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and Pakistan.