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Attack On Pakistani Police Centre Was Not Planned In Afghanistan, Says Taliban

May 12, 2026, 15:47 GMT+1

Zabihullah Mujahid, Taliban spokesman, rejected Pakistani claims that the recent attack on a police center in Bannu was planned in Afghanistan, insisting Afghan soil is not used against any country.

In a statement on Tuesday, the Taliban spokesperson said: “Afghan soil is not used against any country, and no one will be allowed to carry out activities that harm regional security and stability.”

An explosion in the Fateh Khel area of Bannu district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on Saturday night killed 15 police officers and wounded four others, including one civilian.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry later said the attack had been planned by militants based in Afghanistan, citing investigations, evidence and technical intelligence.

Following the attack, Pakistan summoned Sardar Ahmad Shakib, Afghanistan ambassador to Pakistan, and handed him an official protest letter over the incident.

Pakistan’s defence minister also warned that the country could carry out decisive operations against the Afghan Taliban in response to the militant attack on the police post in Bannu.

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Arrests & Killings Of Former Afghan Forces Continue, Says UN

May 12, 2026, 14:18 GMT+1

United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said arrests and killings of former Afghan security personnel continued in early 2026, documenting 23 arbitrary detentions, nine torture cases and five killings.

UNAMA said former government officials and members of the former Afghan National Defence and Security Forces were being forcibly deported to Afghanistan and faced rights abuses upon their return.

Media Freedom

In its latest quarterly report, UNAMA said media freedom in Afghanistan faced growing restrictions and pressure on journalists and media activists continued.

According to the report, the Taliban Ministry of Information and Culture revoked the licences of all media-support organisations except three in January 2026.

The report referred to the case of Mahdi Ansari, who was released in March 2026 after serving an 18-month prison sentence on charges of spreading propaganda against the Taliban. Three other media workers arrested in July 2025 remain in detention.

UNAMA also reported that two local media outlets were suspended by Taliban order during the reporting period.

The television channel Rah-e-Farda TV was suspended after its founder criticised Taliban military policies towards Pakistan.

Meanwhile, the private Khushal Radio in Ghazni was temporarily suspended after female students phoned a male presenter during a live broadcast.

Religious Freedom

UNAMA said Taliban authorities in at least eight provinces ordered Shia communities to observe Eid according to dates announced by the Taliban rather than the Shia calendar.

According to the report, several Shia clerics in one province were arrested for refusing to celebrate Eid on the Taliban-declared date.

UNAMA also reported that Taliban morality officials in Kabul prevented women from entering a shrine during Nowruz celebrations. In Herat, a Shia mosque was ordered to stop women from attending evening prayers.

The report further referred to Decree Number 12 issued by Hibatullah Akhundzada, stating that the new regulations describe Sunni Islam as the “dominant religious doctrine” while labelling other religious beliefs as “heretical.”

Taliban-Pakistan Border Clashes Killed 372 Civilians in 3 Months, Says UN

May 12, 2026, 12:42 GMT+1

United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said 372 civilians were killed and 397 injured in border clashes between the Taliban and Pakistan between January and March 2026.

In a report released on Tuesday, UNAMA said it had documented 95 incidents during the first three months of the year, attributing 94 per cent of them to Pakistan and one incident to the Taliban administration.

Pakistani air strikes accounted for 64 percent of civilian casualties, while another 35 per cent resulted from indirect fire along the border, the report said.

According to UNAMA, the casualties included 72 women, 48 girls, 95 boys and 554 men killed or injured.

The deadliest incident during the reporting period was a Pakistani air strike on the Omid drug rehabilitation centre in Kabul in March 2026. UNAMA confirmed at least 269 deaths and 122 injuries in the attack, most of them male patients.

The report said Kabul recorded the highest number of civilian casualties, followed by the border provinces of Kunar and Paktika.

UNAMA also referred to Pakistani attacks on residential and border areas in Kunar and Paktika provinces, including air strikes in the Sarkany and Barmal districts and artillery shelling in border regions of Khost and Nangarhar.

Other incidents causing casualties were reported in Khost, Nangarhar, Paktia, Kandahar and Nuristan provinces.

UNAMA urged both the Pakistani government and the Taliban administration to respect international humanitarian law and refrain from using schools and hospitals for military purposes.

EU to Soon Invite Taliban Officials to Brussels for Migration Talks

May 12, 2026, 11:40 GMT+1

Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported that the European Commission will soon invite Taliban officials to Brussels for talks on the deportation of Afghan migrants.

According to the report, a letter will shortly be sent to Kabul to arrange the timing of the meeting. The talks are being organised in coordination with Sweden, and two European delegations are expected to visit Afghanistan beforehand.

A European Commission spokesperson said EU officials are working on holding a technical meeting in Brussels with Taliban representatives, although no date has yet been announced.

The move comes as around 20 EU member states seek ways to return Afghan migrants, particularly those convicted of crimes. Several European countries had previously urged the EU in a joint letter to find diplomatic and practical solutions to advance the process.

The plan has drawn criticism from human rights organisations and migrant advocacy groups. Critics argue that returning Afghans to a country facing severe human rights, humanitarian and economic crises could put many lives at risk.

According to EU figures, around one million Afghans applied for asylum in European countries between 2013 and 2024. Afghans also remained the largest group of asylum seekers in Europe in 2025.

Some countries, including Germany, have already begun deporting Afghan migrants.

Taliban Beat Shia Cleric In Kabul After Marriage Dispute, Say Sources

May 12, 2026, 10:23 GMT+1

Local sources told Afghanistan International that Taliban morality police detained and beat prominent Shia cleric Hussaindad Sharifi after he officiated the marriage of an engaged couple before their wedding ceremony.

According to the sources, officials from the Taliban’s Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice detained a young man and woman in Kabul’s Dasht-e-Barchi area on Wednesday while they were shopping for their wedding, accusing them of having an unlawful relationship.

The couple, who were engaged, were taken to Police District 18.

Sources close to the family said Sharifi had previously conducted the Islamic marriage ceremony and that legal religious documents had been presented to Taliban officials.

However, the officials reportedly rejected the validity of the marriage certificate and summoned the cleric for punishment.

According to the sources, Sharifi was released only after being forced to sign a written pledge.

Pressure On Religious Minorities

The incident comes amid growing reports of pressure on the Hazara community and Shia Muslims in Afghanistan.

Earlier, several students at Balkh University said the Taliban had pressured them to abandon their religious beliefs.

Taliban authorities have also instructed university students to follow Sunni Islamic jurisprudence in religious practices, including communal prayers.

Human rights activists say the Taliban are disregarding the “Shia Personal Status Law” and attempting to impose Hanafi jurisprudence across public life, including in matters of marriage and divorce.

Taliban officials have not formally commented on the reports, though the group has repeatedly claimed that the rights of all ethnic and religious communities are protected under Islamic law.

International organisations and human rights groups have widely criticised those claims.

During nearly five years of Taliban rule, the group has repeatedly detained and harassed Shia clerics and community leaders for various reasons.

Taliban Reject Pakistan Army Chief Remarks, Urge Islamabad To Tackle Militants

May 11, 2026, 18:12 GMT+1

Zabihullah Mujahid, Taliban spokesman, rejected remarks by Asim Munir, Pakistan army chief, insisting Afghanistan is not being used against any country. He urged Pakistan to address militant activity within its own borders.

Mujahid’s audio statement was broadcast on Monday by Radio Television Afghanistan, the Taliban-controlled state broadcaster.

He said the Taliban administration would not allow Afghan territory to be used against any country, including Pakistan.

The response came after Munir said on Sunday, during an event marking the first anniversary of the four-day conflict between Pakistan and India, that militant activity originating from Afghan territory continued and that the Taliban must dismantle terrorist sanctuaries.

Speaking in Rawalpindi, Munir also accused India of returning to what he described as a long-standing policy of supporting militancy after failing on the battlefield.

He added that security threats to Pakistan continued not only from India but also from Afghanistan.