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UN Calls For Afghan Women’s Inclusion In Political Decision-Making

Jun 24, 2026, 14:06 GMT+1

The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), marking International Day of Women in Diplomacy, stressed the need for the meaningful participation of Afghan women in public life and political decision-making.

The mission said women’s presence and voices are vital to achieving lasting peace, inclusive development and a brighter future for Afghanistan.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, UNAMA said ensuring the meaningful participation of women in public life and decision-making processes in Afghanistan remains a fundamental necessity.

The UN mission once again underlined the importance of providing equal opportunities for Afghan women and girls, saying they must be able to study, lead and play an effective role across all sectors of society, including diplomacy and public service.

International Day of Women in Diplomacy is observed annually on June 24 and aims to highlight the role of women in diplomacy, peacebuilding and international decision-making, while promoting their equal participation in global affairs.

UNAMA said women diplomats are not merely participants in international relations but also serve as leaders, peace mediators and advocates for equality, helping to strengthen international cooperation, advance peace and shape inclusive decision-making.

The mission added that women contribute to building a fairer, more stable and sustainable world through their knowledge, experience and perspectives, making their presence in diplomatic and public spheres especially important.

Since returning to power in August 2021, the Taliban have imposed sweeping restrictions on the private and public lives of Afghan women, resulting in their gradual exclusion from public life.

Before the Taliban’s return to power, women played an active role in Afghanistan’s political decision-making. Under the previous government, women served in the cabinet and held senior positions, including governors, ambassadors, district governors and members of parliament.

Human rights activists say the Taliban have entrenched “gender apartheid” by systematically excluding women from society.

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Taliban Justice Minister Releases Shia Detainees Held In Private Jail

Jun 24, 2026, 12:15 GMT+1
Taliban Justice Minister Releases Shia Detainees Held In Private Jail
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Sources told Afghanistan International that Abdul Hakim Sharaei, the Taliban’s justice minister, released a number of detained Shia Muslims from his personal detention facility after receiving orders from the Taliban prime minister and interior minister.

According to the sources, Sharaei also ordered the release of several other Shia detainees who are currently being held at the Kabul provincial detention centre.

The Taliban had arrested between 25 and 40 people on the justice minister’s orders. Some were held in Sharaei’s personal detention facility inside the Ministry of Justice building, while others were transferred to the Kabul provincial detention centre. The detainees spent three days in the minister’s private jail.

Sources said that Zia, deputy head of the security commission overseeing mosques, was among those detained in the minister’s personal prison and has now been released.

Earlier this week, Taliban forces detained Shia Muslims from mosques and Hussainiyas in western Kabul for raising Muharram flags.

Sources familiar with the matter told Afghanistan International that Sharaee released the Muharram mourners following instructions from Taliban Prime Minister Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund and Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani.

On Wednesday, a delegation of Shia community representatives, including Sayed Sufi Gardizi, Nematullah Ghafari, Sheikh Mubashir and university lecturer Yaser Mohseni, visited the Ministry of Justice on behalf of the Shia Ulema Council, the Office of Hazara Community Elders and the mosque and Hussainiya security commission.

According to the sources, following the meeting with Shia representatives, the Taliban justice minister released those held in his personal detention facility and also ordered the release of Shia detainees being held at the Kabul provincial detention centre.

In recent days, Taliban forces raided several Shia places of worship in Kabul, including Imam Hussain Mojtaba Mosque in the Telegraph Station area, Mohammadi Mosque in Qala-e Shahada, Nabi Akram Mosque in Omid Sabz Township, Gulzar-e Shohada Hussainiya in Sarkariz, Hasnain Mosque in Karte Seh, Resalat Seminary and the Afshari Mosque near the Ministry of Justice.

On Tuesday, the Taliban justice minister reportedly summoned several Shia elders to his office and detained them for several hours. Sources said they were released after providing assurances that Muharram flags would be taken down.

Drug Production In Afghanistan Has Fallen By 90 Percent, Says Russia

Jun 24, 2026, 11:46 GMT+1
Drug Production In Afghanistan Has Fallen By 90 Percent, Says Russia
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Sergei Shoigu, Secretary of Russia’s Security Council, said Taliban authorities have fulfilled their commitments on counter-narcotics efforts and have effectively eliminated drug production and trafficking in Afghanistan.

Speaking after a meeting of national security advisers in India, Shoigu said Afghan authorities had taken extensive measures to curb drug trafficking. Shoigu said Afghan authorities had developed a strategy to curb drug trafficking, consistently pursued it and succeeded in putting it into effect.

The Russian security chief, citing available data, stated that drug production and trafficking in Afghanistan had fallen by around 90 percent.

His remarks mark a notable shift from comments he made last month. On May 26, on the sidelines of the International Security Forum in Moscow, Shoigu said the situation in Afghanistan remains complex. The threats of drug and arms trafficking persist, and the activities of international terrorist groups and organisations continue.

After returning to power, the Taliban announced a nationwide ban on the cultivation, production and trafficking of narcotics. Although international assessments indicate a sharp decline in opium poppy cultivation, the practice has not been completely eradicated and continues in some provinces. Last year, efforts to destroy poppy fields in Badakhshan led to deadly clashes between Taliban forces and local farmers.

The United Nations has meanwhile warned that, alongside the decline in poppy cultivation, the production of synthetic drugs in Afghanistan is increasing. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime said in a recent report that despite a 20 percent reduction in poppy cultivation, the manufacture of synthetic narcotics, particularly methamphetamine, has continued to rise.

According to the report, methamphetamine seizures in Afghanistan and neighbouring countries increased by around 50 percent by the end of 2024 compared with the previous year.

Kazakh Company Eyes Investment In Afghanistan’s Mining Sector

Jun 24, 2026, 09:27 GMT+1
Kazakh Company Eyes Investment In Afghanistan’s Mining Sector
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Kazakh media have reported that a Kazakh company plans to begin field operations for the exploration and development of chromium deposits in Afghanistan and may acquire a mine in the country.

Kazba News Agency reported on Tuesday that Kazakhstan’s Eurasian Resources Group is considering either the direct purchase of a chromium mine or the creation of a joint venture with Afghan partners.

According to the report, during talks between Kazakh Deputy Prime Minister Serik Zhumangarin and the Taliban administration’s Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the import of industrial-grade aquamarine stone to Kazakhstan for processing was discussed.

The report added that plans were also made to sign a memorandum of understanding for the export of 30,000 tons of zinc ore from Afghanistan to Kazakhstan for processing, in a deal valued at $18.8 million.

The Taliban’s Ministry of Industry and Commerce previously announced that 25 cooperation agreements were signed between Afghan and Kazakh private-sector representatives during the Afghan Kazakh Business Forum in Kabul.

The agreements were signed during the visit of Kazakhstan’s deputy prime minister to Kabul and are aimed at expanding trade and facilitating imports and exports between the private sectors of the two countries.

Leading a high-level delegation, Zhumangarin visited Kabul on June 21 and held separate meetings with senior Taliban officials, including Prime Minister Mohammad Hassan Akhund, Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani and Industry and Commerce Minister Nooruddin Azizi.

Although Kazakhstan, like most countries except Russia, has not formally recognised the Taliban administration, political and economic ties between the two sides have expanded significantly over the past five years. Senior officials from both sides have made repeated visits to Kabul and Astana.

Yerkin Tukumov, Kazakhstan’s special representative for Afghanistan, has said that removing the Taliban from Kazakhstan’s list of terrorist organisations does not amount to recognising the Taliban administration. He stressed that Kazakhstan’s policy remains one of engagement without formal recognition and described Afghanistan’s situation as still highly complex.

Referring to Afghanistan’s economic and social challenges, Tukumov said decades of experience have shown that any economic, humanitarian or institutional vacuum in the country is inevitably filled by destructive forces.

Single SCO Member Is Preventing Taliban Inclusion, Says Russian Envoy

Jun 24, 2026, 08:18 GMT+1
Single SCO Member Is Preventing Taliban Inclusion, Says Russian Envoy
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Russian President’s special envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, told Izvestia that the main obstacle to Taliban participation in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) is the explicit opposition of one member state.

Kabulov did not name the country, but according to Izvestia, Pakistan is currently the principal opponent of Taliban participation in SCO activities and meetings.

The newspaper reported that although Afghanistan was granted observer status in the SCO in 2012, Kabul’s participation in the organisation’s regional mechanisms has effectively been frozen since the Taliban returned to power in 2021. Afghanistan’s last official participation in SCO meetings dates back to 2020.

Kabulov said the authorities in Kabul are seeking full membership in the SCO and already maintain contacts with other member states. However, because all decisions within the organisation require unanimous approval, opposition from a single member has stalled any progress on the issue.

Experts cited in the report said Pakistan’s opposition is linked to the recent deterioration in relations between Islamabad and the Taliban. Ties have been strained since last summer over border clashes, missile strikes and Pakistani accusations that the Taliban provide sanctuary to militants from Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Cross-border attacks between the two sides have also continued.

International Recognition Remains a Major Obstacle

Izvestia reported that, beyond Pakistan’s presumed veto, analysts at Moscow-based think tanks believe another barrier exists within the SCO itself: the Taliban administration’s lack of international recognition among all member states.

According to analysts, even if Pakistan were to agree, inviting Taliban representatives to official SCO meetings would remain difficult until all ten full members formally recognise the Taliban administration.

Despite these obstacles, Moscow has continued expanding relations with Kabul. Kabulov said Taliban representatives would again take part in this year’s Moscow Format consultations on Afghanistan.

His remarks come after Russia, and the Taliban signed a technical and military cooperation agreement in May. Kabulov described the deal as a legal framework for future cooperation.

Ahmad Saidmurodzoda, Deputy Secretary-General of the SCO, told Izvestia that a review of the organisation’s legal framework is currently under way under Kyrgyzstan’s chairmanship. Until those reforms are completed and approved, all observer entities, including Afghanistan, will retain their current status.

On June 10, Bakhtiyor Khakimov, Russia’s special envoy to the SCO, said Afghanistan’s full membership remains problematic, while also calling for the revival of the SCO-Afghanistan Contact Group.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation was founded in 2001 and currently comprises ten full members: Belarus, China, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

A number of other countries and entities, including Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Cambodia, Egypt, Kuwait, Laos, the Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Turkiye and the United Arab Emirates, participate as observers or dialogue partners.

Taliban Leader Forms High-Level Commission To Address Badakhshan Disputes

Jun 23, 2026, 18:06 GMT+1
Taliban Leader Forms High-Level Commission To Address Badakhshan Disputes
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Zabihullah Amiri, the Taliban’s Director of Information and Culture in Badakhshan, told Afghanistan International that the group’s leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, has established a high-level commission to address problems in the province.

The commission includes Abdul Haq Wasiq, head of Taliban intelligence; Fasihuddin Fitrat, Chief of Army Staff; Shamsuddin Shariati, head of the Directorate for Monitoring and Follow-up of Decrees; Helmand Governor Amanuddin Mansour; and several other senior Taliban officials.

Ibrahim Sadr, deputy interior minister, and Economy Minister Din Mohammad Hanif are also members of the commission. The body held a meeting in Faizabad on Tuesday.

Ismail Ghaznavi, the Taliban governor of Badakhshan, is not a member of the commission. However, Amiri said its members had also met with the governor.

According to Amiri, the Taliban leader has tasked the commission with examining Badakhshan’s problems and submitting a report to Kandahar.

The Taliban official said all issues in the province, including disputes surrounding the mining sector, would be reviewed by the commission.

Intelligence Post Offered to Juma Khan Fateh

Amiri also told Afghanistan International that Juma Khan Fateh has been offered the leadership of an intelligence department branch in Kabul. According to Amiri, Fateh has accepted the proposal and is expected to move to the capital soon.

Fateh has not publicly commented on the offer.

The Taliban leader recently removed Juma Khan Fateh from his position as deputy governor of Zabul and appointed former Standards and Quality Administration chief Faizullah Tamim as his replacement.

The commission was formed following growing discontent in Badakhshan.

Local Taliban members have complained about the management of mining resources and what they describe as a reduction in their role in overseeing the province’s mineral wealth.

The creation of the commission suggests the Taliban leadership is still attempting to manage dissatisfaction among local commanders in Badakhshan through dialogue.

One of the clearest signs of internal tensions has been Juma Khan Fateh’s dissatisfaction with the Taliban’s policies in the province. He has reportedly opposed his reassignment to Zabul, the continuation of mining operations in the Darwaz region and the imprisonment of some of his associates.

Sources told Afghanistan International on Saturday that tensions among Taliban factions in Badakhshan had intensified and that the risk of an internal armed confrontation was increasing.

Several previous rounds of talks between Fateh and senior Taliban officials, including Army Chief Fasihuddin Fitrat, reportedly ended without a breakthrough.