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UN Confirms Death Of Teenage Boy During Herat Protests

Jun 10, 2026, 16:51 GMT+1

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan has expressed concern over the Force suppression of protesters in the Jebrail area of Herat.

UNAMA confirmed that at least one teenage boy was killed by Taliban gunfire and several others were injured as a result of beatings.

The UN mission said reports of a second death are still being verified.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, UNAMA said at least 30 women in Herat were detained by the Taliban’s Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice between June 7 and 8 on accusations of violating dress code instructions. According to the UN mission, dozens of other women received verbal warnings.

UNAMA said all those detained were released on June 9 but stressed that the consequences of arbitrary detention have a profound impact on women and their families.

Georgette Gagnon, head of the UN mission in Afghanistan, said that the detention of women in Afghanistan carries a significant social stigma and can expose them to further violence and isolation within their families and communities even after their release.

She stressed that Taliban authorities are obliged under international law to uphold freedom of expression, the right to peaceful assembly, liberty and personal security, and protection from arbitrary detention for all Afghans.

UNAMA reiterated that any action by security forces must comply with international legal standards, including the principles of necessity, proportionality and non-discrimination in the use of force. It added that individuals have the right to express peaceful protest without fear of violence, intimidation or reprisals.

The mission called on Taliban authorities to revoke all policies and practices that restrict the rights and fundamental freedoms of women and girls, including limitations on freedom of movement, freedom of expression, education, employment and participation in public life.

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Airstrikes In Afghanistan Killed 26 TTP Members, Says Pakistan

Jun 10, 2026, 14:22 GMT+1
Airstrikes In Afghanistan Killed 26 TTP Members, Says Pakistan
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Pakistan’s Ministry of Information & Broadcasting said its military carried out strikes along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border overnight.

In a statement on Wednesday, the ministry said the operation targeted those behind recent terrorist attacks in Pakistan and resulted in the deaths of 26 members of the Pakistani Taliban.

Earlier, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed that Pakistan had carried out attacks inside Afghanistan.

In a post on X early on Wednesday, Mujahid said Pakistan had “bombed civilian homes in the provinces of Kunar, Khost and Paktika”.

The Taliban spokesman also shared images on X and claimed that 11 children, one woman and one elderly person were killed in the strikes.

Earlier, local sources reported several powerful explosions in the eastern and south-eastern provinces of Kunar, Khost and Paktia.

Pakistan’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting said the strikes targeted the hideouts and sanctuaries of those responsible for recent terrorist attacks in Pakistan. The statement referred to the June 9 attack on a security forces checkpoint in Musa Dara, a vehicle-borne suicide attack on a military base in North Waziristan on 2 June, and an attack on a police station in Bannu, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, on May 9.

Pakistan said four targets were completely destroyed in the cross-border operation. According to Islamabad, these included a training camp, a hideout, an ammunition depot and facilities linked to Aleem Khan Khushali and Akhtar Muhammad Jani Khel, commanders of the Pakistani Taliban.

Pakistan stressed that its relentless campaign against terrorism by security forces and police would continue with full force until the threat of externally supported terrorism is eradicated.

The latest Pakistani strikes inside Afghanistan came about 10 days after Taliban Defence Minister Mullah Yaqoob Mujahid returned from Moscow and declared at Kabul airport that Pakistan would soon no longer dare to attack Afghan territory. He also provided details about a military cooperation agreement between the Taliban administration and Russia.

In recent months, Pakistan has launched several operations targeting different parts of Afghanistan, including Kabul. These strikes have drawn strong condemnation from some Afghan political figures, who have described them as a violation of Afghanistan’s national sovereignty.

Islamabad accuses the Taliban of supporting the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and providing the group with sanctuary inside Afghanistan. The Taliban deny those allegations.

Several rounds of talks between the Taliban and Pakistan, mediated by countries including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkiye and China, have failed to produce an agreement or bring an end to tensions.

Taliban Commander Sentenced To 42 Years For Kidnapping US Journalist

Jun 10, 2026, 11:17 GMT+1
Taliban Commander Sentenced To 42 Years For Kidnapping US Journalist
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تصویر کشیده شده از صحنه دادگاه نجیب‌الله

Haji Najibullah, a Taliban commander involved in the kidnapping of American journalist David Rohde and two companions, was sentenced to 42 years in prison by a court in New York on Tuesday.

According to ABC News, US federal prosecutors said Najibullah and his associates held Rohde, his Afghan interpreter and their driver hostage for more than seven months in hideouts across Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2008.

The kidnappers sought ransom payments and the release of Taliban prisoners held by the United States in exchange for the hostages’ freedom.

Prosecutors said Najibullah forced the captives to record proof-of-life videos during their detention. In the recordings, Taliban fighters armed with automatic weapons threatened the hostages, who appealed to their families and the US government to meet the group’s demands.

“Every day of their captivity, the hostages and their families lived in fear that they would never see their loved ones again,” prosecutors said in a statement.

Najibullah served as a Taliban commander in Wardak province, bordering Kabul, from 2007 and also acted as an unofficial spokesman for the group. Prosecutors said fighters under his command carried out numerous ambushes on US military convoys, resulting in the deaths of several American service members.

In November 2008, Rohde, then a reporter for The New York Times, travelled to meet Najibullah for an interview. Prosecutors said Taliban gunmen acting on Najibullah’s orders abducted Rohde, his interpreter and their driver, confiscated their mobile phones, bound their hands and blindfolded them.

According to the prosecution, after Rohde informed his captors that he was American, one of the kidnappers shouted in Pashto that they intended to send a “blood message” to then-US President Barack Obama.

Rohde and his interpreter eventually escaped after seven months, using a rope to flee when their guards had fallen asleep. Rohde later narrated the story in his book A Rope and a Prayer.

Najibullah was arrested in Ukraine in October 2020 and later extradited to the United States to stand trial.

Taliban Continue To Facilitate Conditions For Terrorist Groups, Says Russian Official

Jun 10, 2026, 09:58 GMT+1
Taliban Continue To Facilitate Conditions For Terrorist Groups, Says Russian Official
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A Russian Foreign Ministry official says the Taliban continue to allow conditions in Afghanistan that enable some terrorist groups to operate. He said an estimated 20 militant groups with between 20,000 and 23,000 fighters are currently present in the country.

Russia’s state news agency TASS reported on Tuesday that Pyotr Ilyichev, director of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s Department for New Challenges and Threats, made the remarks during the 19th meeting of heads of counterterrorism structures from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) member countries.

He warned that the security situation in Afghanistan remains critical and poses a serious threat, particularly to neighbouring states.

According to the report, Ilyichev also expressed concern about militant groups gaining access to new technologies, including commercial satellite communications and the potential use of artificial intelligence.

He further warned about the risks of cross-border attacks and efforts by militants to radicalise vulnerable segments of society in neighbouring countries.

Ilyichev said the situation is made more concerning by the growing links between terrorist organisations and organised criminal networks. According to him, these groups finance much of their activity through drug trafficking, illicit arms trading, the smuggling of precious stones and metals, and wildlife trafficking.

Taliban officials have repeatedly maintained that they do not allow terrorist groups to operate in Afghanistan and that Afghan territory will not be used against any neighbouring country.

However, multiple reports by the United Nations and regional intelligence agencies have continued to point to the presence of groups such as ISIS-K and other militant organisations in Afghanistan.

At regional forums, including meetings of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, the CIS and the Moscow Format, Russia has repeatedly stressed the need to prevent Afghanistan from becoming a safe haven for terrorists and has proposed measures to strengthen the southern borders of Central Asian states.

The remarks come shortly after Russia and the Taliban signed a military-technical cooperation agreement. The accord was signed on May 27 on the sidelines of an international security forum in Moscow by Sergei Shoigu, Secretary of Russia’s Security Council, and Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid, the Taliban’s defence minister.

During his visit to Moscow, Mullah Yaqoob said cooperation with Russia was highly important for the Taliban administration, adding that Afghanistan and Russia share long-standing historical ties and should deepen their cooperation further.

Taliban Confirm Pakistani Airstrikes, Report 13 Dead

Jun 10, 2026, 09:02 GMT+1
Taliban Confirm Pakistani Airstrikes, Report 13 Dead
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Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid has confirmed that Pakistan carried out strikes inside Afghanistan, saying Pakistani forces bombed civilian homes in Kunar, Khost and Paktika provinces. According to Mujahid, 13 people were killed and 14 others injured.

In a post on X early Wednesday, Mujahid shared images from the aftermath of the attacks and said the dead included 11 children, one woman and one elderly person.

Pakistani sources told Afghanistan International early Wednesday that the country had conducted air strikes against what they described as terrorist camps and infrastructure in the provinces of Khost, Paktika and Kunar.

Local sources also reported several powerful explosions overnight in the eastern and south-eastern provinces of Kunar, Khost and Paktia.

Pakistani authorities have not yet commented publicly on the reported strikes.

Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai condemned the attacks.

In a post on X, Karzai said Pakistan was facing the consequences of what he described as misguided policies and hostile actions in the region, adding that continuing such policies would not achieve its objectives.

He urged Pakistan to abandon what he characterised as a policy of war and destruction towards Afghanistan and instead pursue good neighbourly relations and constructive engagement.

Istanbul Talks Underway On Taliban-Pakistan Tensions

Jun 9, 2026, 16:57 GMT+1
Istanbul Talks Underway On Taliban-Pakistan Tensions
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Sources told Afghanistan International on Tuesday that a meeting involving representatives close to the Taliban and Pakistan has begun in Istanbul.

Efforts to curb the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in Afghanistan and address ISIS-K activity in Pakistan are among the key topics under discussion.

According to the sources, a delegation close to the Taliban administration, led by Jafar Mahdawi, an Afghan politician, is attending the two-day meeting. They said the Pakistani delegation is headed by Mushahid Hussain, Pakistan’s former Minister of Information and Broadcasting.

The sources added that Pakistani representatives were unwilling to travel to Kabul for talks with the Taliban, and that the negotiations are being held in Istanbul with Turkish mediation.

A month ago, another round of informal talks between Taliban and Pakistani representatives in Türkiye concluded without reaching an agreement.

The Taliban had previously rejected Pakistan’s demands regarding the TTP during several rounds of official talks involving senior officials, held in Turkiye, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

In the latest diplomatic contacts, Taliban and Pakistani representatives also met and held discussions in Urumqi, China.