AFF Acknowledges Conducting Attack On Taliban's Panjshir Governor's Office

The Afghanistan Freedom Front (AFF) has declared responsibility for the recent attack on the Taliban governor's office in Panjshir, which occurred on Wednesday night.

The Afghanistan Freedom Front (AFF) has declared responsibility for the recent attack on the Taliban governor's office in Panjshir, which occurred on Wednesday night.
According to a statement released by the AFF, the attack resulted in the deaths of at least four individuals, including two of the Taliban governor's guards. The current status of the governor remains unknown.
Further details provided by the AFF indicate that the Taliban governor's office in Panjshir has been rendered inoperative since Thursday, with Taliban personnel being barred entry.
Local sources in Panjshir reported to Afghanistan International on Wednesday night that an explosion was heard from the provincial office headquarters. Post-explosion, the Taliban reportedly sealed off the area.
As of now, the Taliban have yet to issue a response to the incident.


A team of UN experts has cautioned Pakistan against continuing the deportation of Afghan refugees, highlighting the severe human rights risks this poses to Afghan nationals.
The experts, in a statement, emphasised that Pakistan should not make groundless connections between Afghan refugees and terrorism threats. They pointed out that the current human rights violations and discrimination against women and girls in Afghanistan mean that mass deportations could significantly harm migrant women and girls.
The statement underscored Pakistan's obligation to align its immigration policies with international laws. This includes adhering to the principle of "non-refoulement," which forbids returning individuals to a country where they may face serious threats to their life or freedom. Furthermore, it calls for Pakistan to ensure that refugees have access to asylum-seeking processes and necessary protection.
The experts expressed their concern over the absence of any measures in Pakistan to prevent the potential irreversible harm and dangers that Afghan nationals could face upon their return.
The statement also raised concerns about the heightened risk of trafficking that migrant women and girls may encounter during forced return and displacement. It noted the particular vulnerability of religious and ethnic minorities to persecution, especially in cases of forced returns.
Further risks highlighted include the potential for deported women and girls to face early and forced marriage, human trafficking, and deprivation of rights to education, work, freedom of movement, and legal protection in Afghanistan.
The UN experts also called on the international community to assist in hosting Afghan refugees. This includes increasing opportunities for resettlement and promoting rights-based family reunification processes.

Shahzada Rostami, a former security officer of Afghanistan's previous government, disclosed to Afghanistan International that the Taliban has captured 16 of his family members and assaulted his teenage daughter in Takhar province.
Rostami reported that his second wife and child, returning from Iran, were apprehended by the Taliban in Nimroz province and subsequently moved to Takhar. He stated that his family resides in Darqad district, Takhar, and he escaped to Iran fearing for his safety following the Taliban's ascension to power.
Despite the Taliban's declaration of a general amnesty and urging of government officials to return to Afghanistan with assurance of safety, Rostami recounted the recent arrest of 12 family members, including his children, on Tuesday, followed by the abduction of four more relatives on Wednesday.
He revealed that after the Taliban's takeover, he fled to Iran with his second wife. Rostami expressed concerns about the Taliban's intentions to force his wife, a Tajikistan national, into marriage with a Taliban commander, despite their lawful marriage.
Rostami, who served as an internal security officer in the Takhar Police Command, claimed that the Taliban have repeatedly searched his house, destroyed his property whilst searching for weapons, and severely beat his teenage daughter, resulting in injuries to her hand and face requiring urgent medical attention.
He has called upon the United Nations and human rights organisations to investigate and address this grave situation.

Afghanistan International Pashto has reported from various sources that the Taliban, under pressure from Pakistan, has detained 25 members of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) within Afghanistan.
These sources indicate that the Taliban has been urging Pakistani Taliban leaders to cease their attacks in Pakistan.
Confirmations of these arrests, including some key Pakistani Taliban leaders, have come from both Afghan Taliban insiders and members of the Pakistani Taliban. The apprehensions have occurred in Kabul, Nangarhar, and Kunar recently.
The individuals detained are on Pakistan's most-wanted list, implicated in an assault on a Punjab Air Force training centre, a claim made by Pakistan. Tehreek Jihad Pakistan, an armed faction, took responsibility for this attack.
Afghanistan International Pashto sources revealed the capture of Azhar, Musa, Zishan, and Toor Mullah, key Pakistani Taliban figures, by the Afghan Taliban on the Jalalabad-Kabul highway. Local sources in Kunar also reported the Taliban's detention of five significant TTP leaders from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's Malakand division three days prior.
A TTP leader expressed to Afghanistan International their challenging situation, noting the commencement of their members' arrests. The Afghan Taliban's intelligence head, Abdul Haq Wathiq, reportedly asked TTP leader Mufti Noor Wali to halt the group's assaults in Pakistan. This also includes a call to stop suicide bombings, with Pakistan alleging Afghan Taliban involvement in such attacks and providing evidence to support this claim.
Sources suggest that due to Pakistan's intense pressure, the TTP was compelled to form a new group, Tehreek Jihad Pakistan, to continue its attacks in Pakistan under a different name. Pakistan asserts this new group is an offshoot of the TTP.
Pakistan has also urged the Afghan Taliban to extradite one of the TTP’s senior leaders Hafiz Gul Bahadur. Pakistani officials warn of retaliatory strikes against the TTP in Afghanistan if terrorist attacks increase in Pakistan.
The TTP, an armed entity, has cooperated with the Afghan Taliban against various forces in Afghanistan for two decades and pledged allegiance to the Afghan Taliban leader. Neither the Pakistani government nor the Afghan Taliban have officially addressed these developments.
Experts believe that targeting the Pakistani Taliban in Afghanistan could lead to their opposition to the Afghan Taliban, complicating control efforts. They suggest the Afghan Taliban's efforts to arrest TTP militants are motivated by a desire to avoid conflict in Pakistan and prevent Pakistan from bolstering ISIS in Afghanistan.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has stated that apart from girls, who are not allowed to enter classrooms, the “abusive” educational system of Taliban is also failing boys with the departure of qualified teachers and regressive curriculum changes.
In a new report, HRW added that the changes in the education system have led to increased fears about attending school, falling attendance, and a loss of hope for the future.
The report, “‘Schools are Failing Boys Too’: The Taliban’s Impact on Boys’ Education in Afghanistan,” asked governments and UN agencies to urge the Taliban to end their discriminatory ban on girls’ education and to stop violating boys’ rights to quality education.
The report highlighted some of the Taliban policies and practices that are jeopardising education for Afghan boys, including the dismissal of female teachers, increased use of corporal punishment, and regressive changes to the curriculum.
“The Taliban are causing irreversible damage to the Afghan education system for boys as well as girls,” said Sahar Fetrat, assistant women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch and author of the report. “By harming the whole school system in the country, they risk creating a lost generation deprived of a quality education.”
The research for the report was conducted remotely by interviewing 22 boys in grades 8 to 12, as well as five parents of boys in the same grade range in Kabul, Balkh, Herat, Farah, Parwan, Bamiyan, Nangarhar, and Daikundi provinces between June and August 2022 and March and April 2023, by HRW.
The report stated that boys and parents described a disturbing spike in the use of corporal punishment, including officials beating boys before the whole school for haircut or clothing infractions or for having a mobile phone. Corporal punishment of children in schools is a violation of their human rights, Human Rights Watch said.
HRW emphasised that the Taliban has eliminated subjects including arts, sports, English, and civic education, causing a decline in educational quality.
Another aspect of education which has been stressed upon in the report is that boys are increasingly struggling with anxiety, depression, and other mental health problems in a country where mental health services are sparse.
The report added that the Taliban’s systematic discrimination against women and girls—of which the ban on girls and women studying is only one aspect—is also having harmful effects on boys, including by teaching them harmful gender norms and putting greater pressure on them be the sole financial providers for their families.

The Torkham border crossing, a pivotal point between Afghanistan and Pakistan, was shut down on Wednesday.
Reports from Pakistani media indicate that the closure occurred following a disagreement with Taliban forces over the placement of a new sign at the crossing's entrance. This disagreement led to the Pakistani border officials shutting down the crossing.
Taliban representatives have also confirmed the closure, attributing it to Pakistan. A statement from the Taliban governor's press office in Nangarhar, citing Ismatullah Yaqoob, the Taliban commissioner in Torkham, noted that Pakistani border guards attempted to erect an additional gate next to the existing one, ostensibly to mount a sign on what they claimed as the "presumed line" the previous night.
This Taliban official mentioned that their group obstructed the sign installation, resulting in the subsequent closure of the crossing by Pakistani guards.
Pakistani authorities, however, have yet to officially acknowledge this border closure.