• العربية
  • پښتو
  • فارسی
Brand
  • Afghanistan
  • Sport
  • Markets
  • Afghanistan
  • Sport
  • Markets
  • Theme
  • Language
    • العربية
    • پښتو
    • فارسی
  • Afghanistan
  • Sport
  • Markets
All rights reserved for Volant Media UK Limited
volant media logo

Former Afghan Intelligence Official Killed In Badakhshan

Jul 2, 2026, 12:32 GMT+1

Local sources confirmed to Afghanistan International that Abdul Jamil Joya, the former deputy head of analysis at Badakhshan’s National Directorate of Security, died from injuries sustained in an armed attack in Faizabad, Badakhshan. He was buried on Thursday.

According to the sources, the former security official was targeted in an assassination attempt in Faizabad on Monday and was seriously wounded.

He was transferred in critical condition to a hospital in Kunduz for treatment but died on Tuesday night after suffering gunshot wounds.

According to the information received, he was struck by three bullets, two to the head and one to the leg.

Sources said that after the Taliban returned to power, Joya had been running a private business in Faizabad.

Images obtained by Afghanistan International show a large crowd attending the former official’s funeral in Faizabad city.

No individual or group has claimed responsibility for the attack, and Taliban authorities have not commented on the incident.

Nearly five years after the Taliban returned to power, reports of killings, arbitrary arrests and torture targeting former members of Afghanistan’s previous government and security forces continue.

Earlier, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres confirmed in his latest report that killings, arbitrary arrests and torture of former government employees and security personnel were continuing.

The report said the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) documented at least five killings, 20 cases of arbitrary arrest and detention, and eight cases of torture and ill-treatment involving former government employees and security personnel between January 26 and March 31.

•
•
•

Most Viewed

Pakistan Could Break Apart If Attacks Continue, Says Taliban Minister
1

Pakistan Could Break Apart If Attacks Continue, Says Taliban Minister

2

Former Afghan Intelligence Official Killed In Badakhshan

3

Senior Taliban Officials Arrive In Tehran For Khamenei Funeral

4

Russia & Taliban Hold Talks On Bilateral Cooperation

5

Germany Gave In To Taliban Pressure, Says European Lawmaker

More Stories

Senior Taliban Officials Arrive In Tehran For Khamenei Funeral

Jul 2, 2026, 11:55 GMT+1
Senior Taliban Officials Arrive In Tehran For Khamenei Funeral
100%

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban’s deputy prime minister for economic affairs, and Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi travelled to Tehran on Thursday to attend the funeral of Ali Khamenei, the former supreme leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Images released by Baradar’s office showed Iran’s ambassador to Kabul accompanying the Taliban officials on the trip.

The Islamic Republic had earlier invited Taliban Prime Minister Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund to attend the ceremony. Iran’s ambassador to Kabul, Alireza Bikdeli, later delivered the official invitation for Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral to Mullah Abdul Wasi, the Taliban’s chief of administrative affairs.

Iranian media have reported that the funeral and burial ceremonies for the former leader of the Islamic Republic will begin next Saturday.

Ali Khamenei was killed about four months ago after being targeted in extensive US and Israeli airstrikes.

Amid the continuing war between the US-Israeli coalition and the Islamic Republic, Iran’s Assembly of Experts appointed his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, as the country’s new supreme leader.

Iranian officials have said Khamenei’s funeral and burial were postponed because of the continuing wartime situation.

The Taliban maintains close ties with the Islamic Republic. On Wednesday, Iran’s ambassador to Kabul said relations between Tehran and the Taliban administration were moving in a constructive direction.

During the recent conflict between the United States, Israel and the Islamic Republic, the Taliban publicly expressed support for Tehran.

In 2024, Baradar and Muttaqi also attended the funeral of former Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.

Several foreign officials, including Pakistan’s prime minister, are expected to attend the funeral of the former Iranian supreme leader.

Germany Gave In To Taliban Pressure, Says European Lawmaker

Jul 2, 2026, 09:56 GMT+1
Germany Gave In To Taliban Pressure, Says European Lawmaker
100%

Hannah Neumann, a member of the European Parliament, has criticised Germany’s policy of deporting Afghan nationals to Afghanistan, describing it as a idea that leaves Europe vulnerable to Taliban pressure.

She argued that convicted offenders should remain in prison rather than be returned to Afghanistan.

Speaking to Afghanistan International on Wednesday, the German MEP said Berlin had yielded to Taliban pressure and warned that she did not want other European countries to follow the same approach.

Neumann also argued that deporting convicted Afghan offenders to Afghanistan would increase the risks faced by women in the country.

According to her, the Taliban would not imprison those deported, and Germany’s policy could expose Afghan women to a greater risk of sexual violence.

She added that deportations to Afghanistan would leave Europe more vulnerable to coercion and blackmail by the Taliban.

Asked why Germany had changed its approach and become the first European country to hold talks with the Taliban, Neumann said Berlin had fallen into what she described as the Taliban’s populist trap.

She said the prevailing view in Germany was that Afghan men convicted of crimes should be deported regardless of the consequences.

Neumann also criticised the transfer of Afghanistan’s consulate in Bonn and embassy in Berlin to Taliban representatives, arguing that the move endangered Afghans who had fled the group.

She warned that it could give the Taliban access to the personal information of Afghans who had escaped their rule.

According to Neumann, this could enable the Taliban to target political opponents even outside Afghanistan, using methods similar to those she said Iran has employed against dissidents abroad for years.

Commenting on the invitation extended to a Taliban delegation to visit Brussels, Neumann acknowledged that the decision had been deeply disappointing for many Afghans.

She said technical discussions should, in principle, take place in Kabul and that there was no need to invite a Taliban delegation to a European country.

Neumann noted that the European Union had set clear conditions for engagement with the Taliban five years ago, including respect for human rights, the formation of an inclusive government, unrestricted humanitarian access and preventing Afghanistan from becoming a safe haven for terrorist groups.

She said all of those benchmarks had deteriorated under Taliban rule and questioned why a different standard now appeared to be applied.

The MEP also said the European Commission, which invited the Taliban delegation to Brussels, had been summoned before the European Parliament to explain what had been discussed during the meeting, what commitments the Taliban had made and what outcomes had been achieved.

Russia & Taliban Hold Talks On Bilateral Cooperation

Jul 2, 2026, 08:28 GMT+1
Russia & Taliban Hold Talks On Bilateral Cooperation
100%

Russia’s Foreign Ministry said inter-ministerial consultations were held with the Taliban in Kabul. The talks covered bilateral cooperation in the political, economic, cultural and humanitarian fields.

The ministry said the meeting took place between the Second Asian Department of Russia’s Foreign Ministry and the Third Political Department of the Taliban’s Foreign Ministry.

No further details of the discussions were disclosed.

Russia is the only country to have formally recognised the Taliban administration.

The two sides had previously signed an agreement on military and technical cooperation.

Tamadon TV Director Seriously Ill In Taliban Custody, Say Sources

Jul 1, 2026, 17:09 GMT+1
Tamadon TV Director Seriously Ill In Taliban Custody, Say Sources
100%

Informed sources told Afghanistan International that Mohammad Rahmati, managing director of Tamadon TV, is seriously ill in Taliban custody and has been denied access to medication and medical treatment.

According to the sources, Rahmati suffers from heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure. They said his condition has deteriorated during his detention.

Local sources said his continued imprisonment without medical care has heightened concerns about his health, while his family remains deeply worried about his condition.

Rahmati and Mohammad Reza Ehsani, an employee of Tamadon TV, have been detained for the past 10 days on the orders of the Taliban’s justice minister. Sources said the two men are being held at Kabul provincial prison.

Earlier, Jawad Mohseni, head of Tamadon TV, said that if any harm came to Rahmati, responsibility would lie with the authorities who ordered his detention without a court ruling.

In recent days, Taliban forces raided Tamadon TV’s headquarters in Kabul and suspended the broadcaster’s operations. Officials at the station also said that part of the network’s property had been confiscated.

Pakistan Could Break Apart If Attacks Continue, Says Taliban Minister

Jul 1, 2026, 16:26 GMT+1
Pakistan Could Break Apart If Attacks Continue, Says Taliban Minister
100%

Taliban Information and Culture Minister Sher Ahmad Haqqani warned Pakistan that it could break apart if it continues its attacks on Afghanistan.

Haqqani described Pakistan’s attacks on Afghanistan as “oppressive” and said division and fragmentation inside Pakistan would increase.

Addressing Pakistan, he said: “Division among you will increase. You will be scattered, and it is not unlikely that you will be divided. Division will take place among you. This is not impossible.”

Speaking at a meeting in Kapisa province, the Taliban minister said that “when oppressors commit oppression, God punishes them for it”, adding that such punishment could reach a point where Pakistan’s people face division and the “oppression and brutality” come to an end.

He also said Afghans do not fear Pakistan’s bombings or threats and would not accept defeat. He stressed that the Taliban would not surrender in the face of these attacks.

Haqqani made the remarks on Wednesday during a meeting titled “Enhancing the Intellectual, Ideological and Professional Capacity of Journalists”.

Addressing Pakistan, he said: “We are not afraid of bombings and hardships. We defeated those who were more advanced than you in military equipment and technology.”

The Taliban information minister added that the killing of civilians “is in no way a sign of victory”. He warned: “If Pakistan’s oppressive actions continue, it is not far-fetched that the country could face division.”

Mawlawi Hayatullah Muhajir Farahi, the Taliban deputy minister for publications at the Ministry of Information and Culture, also spoke at the event and said the Taliban had carried out attacks on Islamic State centres in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

He also said Taliban forces do not target civilians, while Pakistani forces attack civilians inside Afghanistan.