Death Toll from Mosque Bombing in Pakistan Rises to Nearly 90

The death toll from Monday’s suicide bombing attack of a mosque in northwestern Pakistan has risen to at least 87 people.  

More than 150 others were wounded in the bombing in central Peshawar, the capital city of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Rescuers were still pulling victims out of the rubble Tuesday. The explosion was so powerful that the roof of the building collapsed.  

The victims were mostly members of the provincial police force, as the mosque was frequented by security and government officials. The attack occurred during traditional afternoon prayers.  

Police officials would not immediately discuss the nature of the attack, saying an investigation was underway.   

Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif “has condemned the suicide mosque bombing” in Peshawar, an official statement said in Islamabad, the Pakistani capital.   

Former Prime Minister Imran Khan, leader of the main opposition in Pakistan, also denounced the bombing, calling it a “terrorist suicide attack” in a Twitter post.    

“It is imperative we improve our intelligence gathering & properly equip our police forces to combat the growing threat of terrorism,” Khan said.  

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the blast as “abhorrent” Monday through his spokesman.    

No one has taken responsibility for the deadly bombing.   

The Pakistani province borders Afghanistan and has experienced repeated terrorist attacks in recent months. Most of the violence in the past is claimed by the outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, known as the Pakistani Taliban. 

The Pakistani Taliban, in a statement released to media outlets, including VOA, said it did not carry out Monday’s deadly attack. 

Some information in this report came from The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse. Richard Green contributed to this report.

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Dozens Killed in Pakistan Mosque Bombing

Pakistani authorities say a suicide bomb attack on a mosque filled with police officers in the country’s northwestern city Peshawar has killed 61 people and wounded more than 150 others. Iftikhar Hussain has this report from Washington. Usman Khan and Umar Farooq contributed.

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Humanitarians Await Taliban ‘Guidelines’ on Women Aid Workers

The U.N. humanitarian chief said Monday that he is awaiting a list of guidelines from Taliban authorities to allow Afghan women to work in the humanitarian sector, following a decree last month that has restricted their work.

“Let’s see if these guidelines do come through; let’s see if they are beneficial; let’s see what space there is for the essential and central role of women in our humanitarian operations,” Martin Griffiths told reporters at the United Nations in New York, following his visit last week to Kabul with the heads of several international aid organizations.

On December 24, the Taliban announced a ban on Afghan women working with domestic and international aid groups, leading some international NGOs to suspend their work.

Griffiths, along with a senior UNICEF official, the president of Save the Children U.S. and the secretary-general of Care International, went to Kabul last week, where they met with nine senior Taliban officials. Griffiths said they included the de facto foreign minister, economy minister, minister of interior, and the first and second deputy prime ministers. Since ousting the previous government in August 2021, the Taliban administration has not received any formal international recognition.

After the December 24 decree, the de facto health minister said it would not apply to his sector. There were also some exceptions made in the education sector, although women and girls have been banned since last month from attending school past the sixth grade.

“In addition to making clear our grave concern about the edict itself, we then also said, OK, if you’re not rescinding the edict now, then we must expand these exceptions to cover all the aspects of humanitarian action,” Griffiths said his delegation told the Taliban.

He said in their meetings, they were told that “such arrangements would be forthcoming” and they should be “patient.” 

“Everybody has opinions as to whether it’s going to work or not,” Griffiths said on whether the guidelines will be helpful. “Our view is that the message has clearly been delivered that women are central, essential workers in the humanitarian sector, in addition to having rights, and we need to see them back to work.”

Humanitarian crisis

Afghanistan is currently in the midst of one of its coldest winters, which comes on top of severe drought, decades of conflict and economic decline. The U.N. says 28 million people are in dire need of aid, while 6 million Afghans are a step away from famine.

Local and international NGOs carry out 70% of the humanitarian response in Afghanistan, said Sofía Sprechmann Sineiro, secretary-general of Care International, who joined the news conference remotely.

“So let there be no ambiguity; tying the hands of NGOs by barring women from giving lifesaving support to other women, will cost lives,” she said.

Without local women on their teams, humanitarians cannot provide services to millions of children and women.

“We won’t be able to identify their needs, communicate to female head of households, of which there are many in Afghanistan, after years and years of conflict, and to do so in a safe and culturally appropriate way,” said Janti Soeripto, president and CEO of Save the Children U.S.

She noted that women make up one-third of the 55,000 Afghan nationals working for NGOs in the country.

“Many of them are sole breadwinners. So if they don’t work, they have no money to support their families,” Soeripto added.

Griffiths said that without more exceptions to the bans it would be a “potential death blow” to many vital humanitarian programs in Afghanistan.

“The case has been made, and we are waiting for the judge to come out with a verdict,” he said of their meetings with the Taliban officials.

The visit by Griffiths and his colleagues followed one by Deputy U.N. Secretary-General Amina Mohammed and the head of U.N. Women. They also met with several Taliban leaders and lobbied them to reverse the edict restricting access to education for Afghan women and girls. 

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India’s Main Opposition Party Finishes ‘End Hatred’ March in Indian-Administered Kashmir

The streets of Srinagar reverberated with the slogans of “End Hatred, Unite India” and “Hail Mother India” on Sunday as thousands of people from different parts of India marched together to mark the end of a nationwide “Bharat Jodo Yatra” or “Unite India” March in Indian-administered Kashmir.

Tight security arrangements were made in the region to prevent violence and ensure the march came to a peaceful conclusion. Residents were barred from moving outside as strict restrictions were imposed at multiple locations in Srinagar, the region’s capital city.

The 135-day march was organized to protest the Hindu nationalist policies of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. The Indian National Congress, or INC, the country’s largest opposition party, kicked off the march in September from Kanyakumari, a coastal town of the south Indian state, Tamil Nadu.

Rahul Gandhi, a member of parliament and the former president of INC, led the 4,080 kilometers journey across the country. Millions of people joined the caravan for periods of time as the procession of 118 permanent travelers moved through 75 districts of various Indian states, according to Jairam Ramesh, media spokesman for INC.

“I learnt a lot during the march after having interactions with thousands of the countrymen. The aim of conducting this march was to end the hatred that is being spread in the country,” Gandhi told reporters during a news conference.

He was referring to alleged persecution of minorities and other communities living in India under the BJP government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

“This march has given the people of India an alternative vision of love, peace and a chance to embrace each other,” said Gandhi. “BJP and [Hindu extremist party] RSS have given a vision full of hatred, arrogance and violence,” he said.

The BJP has not responded to Gandhi’s remarks.

The “Unite India” march entered Indian-Administered Jammu and Kashmir, or J&K, on 20th January. The procession moved for three days all along the hilly terrain to enter the Muslim-majority Kashmir region after spending a couple of days in the Hindu-dominated Jammu division of the Himalayan territory.

Two former chief ministers of J&K, Omar Abdullah of National Conference and Mehbooba Mufti of Peoples Democratic Party, welcomed the Gandhi-led caravan at different locations inside the valley.

The march finally ended at Lal Chowk neighborhood of Srinagar after Gandhi hoisted the Indian national flag in presence of his sister who happens to be the general secretary of INC, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra.

“Had situations in Kashmir improved, then targeted [civilian] killings wouldn’t have happened,” Gandhi said. “People in J&K and Ladakh are unhappy.”

Upcoming elections

People who accompanied Gandhi during the march sang anthems and shouted slogans against BJP.

“Time for the Modi government is up,” Ranbir Singh, a former professor and head of the political science department at Maharshi Dayanand University told VOA. “People of India have realized that they cannot support a party that spreads hate, promotes corruption, does not respect the constitution and the idea of India,” he said, adding that he joined the march in three different states — Rajasthan, Haryana and J&K.

Singh predicted the march will have an impact on Indian politics this year, as elections in nine different states are scheduled in 2023.

“People will teach BJP a lesson of their life,” Singh said. “The results of the elections would be the clear reflection of the Unite India March.”

Avni Bansal, a resident of Madhya Pradesh and a lawyer at Indian Supreme Court in New Delhi, said that to her, the march was similar to a pilgrimage, aimed at redrawing the spirit of India.

“BJP and RSS have complexly politicized and changed the meaning of what India is,” Bansal said. “I think more than anything else, this was our attempt to spread the message of love and fight for what India truly is, which is a liberal fraternity, quality, equality, progressive nation,” she said.

Altaf Thakur, spokesperson of the Kashmir wing of BJP, said the INC should rename its march to the “Forgive INC” march. He said India’s troubles result from the party’s long rule, starting in 1947, the year India and its rival neighboring country Pakistan gained its independence from British rule.

“On 5 August 2019 India got united,” he told VOA, referring to the day the BJP government removed the special status granted to J&K. “The foot-march is nothing but a publicity stunt and an attempt to revive Gandhi family in India,” he said.

He added that if seen practically the person who united “India is none other than Narendra Modi.”

The INC invited the leaders of 23 likeminded opposition parties to attend a ceremony to celebrating the completion of the “Unite India” march.

Leaders from several opposition parties across India and J&K took part in the event on Monday, though some could attend due to heavy snowfall.

Mohammed Muzaffar Shah, vice president of the Awami National Conference, a regional political party, said many parties joined the march in the hope of easing hatred for Muslims, Christians and “untouchable” people called Dalits that he believes has spread under BJP rule.

“I see the majority of the people in India are not communal” — meaning highly factional — “and that is why they are out to strengthen the march,” he told VOA before the ceremony.

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India’s Top Court to Consider Cases Against Block on BBC Documentary

India’s Supreme Court will consider petitions next week against a government order blocking the sharing of clips of a BBC documentary that questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership during riots in 2002 in the western state of Gujarat.

The government has dismissed as a biased “propaganda piece” the film released last week, titled “India: The Modi Question,” and blocked the sharing of any clips from it on social media.

The Supreme Court will take up the petitions next week, Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud said in court on Monday.

A New Delhi-based lawyer, M L Sharma, opposed the government’s move in one of the petitions to the Supreme Court.

A separate petition by lawyer Prashant Bhushan, journalist N. Ram and opposition politician Mahua Moitra focused on the order to take down social media links to the documentary.

In a Twitter comment on the second petition, Law Minister Kiren Rijiju said, “This is how they waste the precious time of the Honorable Supreme Court, where thousands of common citizens are waiting and seeking dates for justice.”

Modi, who aims for a third term in elections next year, was chief minister of Gujarat in February 2002, when a suspected Muslim mob set fire to a train carrying Hindu pilgrims.

The incident sparked one of the worst outbreaks of religious bloodshed in independent India.

In reprisal attacks across the state at least 1,000 people were killed, most of them Muslim, as crowds roamed the streets for days, targeting the religious minority. But activists put the toll at more than twice that, at about 2,500.

Modi has denied accusations that he did not do enough to stop the riots. He was exonerated in 2012 following an inquiry overseen by the Supreme Court and a petition questioning his exoneration was dismissed last year.

The BBC has said the documentary was “rigorously researched” and involved a wide range of voices and opinions, including responses from people in Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.

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Economic Dividend or Disadvantage as India Becomes World’s Most Populous Country This Year

India’s population is set to surpass China’s sometime this year according to the United Nations. Experts say while this represents an opportunity to reap a demographic dividend, much will depend on how India leverages its numbers, especially its massive population of young people. Anjana Pasricha has a report from New Delhi.

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Economic Dividend or Disadvantage as India Becomes World’s Most Populous Country This Year

India will become the world’s most populous country sometime this year, overtaking China, according to the United Nations.

After China reported this month that its population had shrunk for the first time in 60 years, some experts said that India may already be home to more people than China.

“It is not unexpected,” said Poonan Muttreja, executive director at the Population Foundation of India, an advocacy nonprofit organization. “We knew we are going to actually surpass China in 2027 but because of the acceleration in decline of population in China, it has happened faster.”

Both countries have roughly 1.4 billion people. But overtaking China is not just a number — it’s a significant shift, according to demographers. While China’s population has begun reducing sooner than projected, India’s will continue to grow for another three decades. But much more importantly, while China is now aging, nearly half of Indians are under 25 years of age.

That represents an opportunity for India to reap an economic dividend, but experts say much will depend on how the country leverages its numbers, especially its massive working-age population.

These young people can be a pool of talent and a labor resource at a time when many countries are graying and can potentially become a huge emerging market that will attract global companies and investment.

“We are a big market from the consumption side, and we can also be the biggest suppliers of trained manpower,” said S.Y. Quraishi, a former election commissioner, who has authored a book on “The Population Myth – Islam, Family Planning and Politics in India.”

“At the same time there are challenges. For example, India will need to create 90 million non-farm jobs before the end of the decade,” he pointed out.

The numbers are daunting — there are already 900 million working age people and that number is set to hit the billion-mark by the end of the decade.

That worries many young people in a country where the unemployment rate has been stubbornly high in recent years. While India’s economy has recovered from the slump due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and is now the world’s fastest growing major economy, only about 40% of its workforce is employed or is even looking for jobs, according to estimates.

College students are perturbed about what this means for their future.

“More people, less jobs, more competition — the big population is a disadvantage for us,” said undergraduate student Anmol Jain, who fears that entrance examinations for a postgraduate course that he is preparing for will become even more fiercely competitive.

But there is also optimism among those who see India’s youth bulge as representing dynamism and opportunity. “Younger minds have more ideas. Entrepreneurship is the solution,” points out Aran Gulia, another college student. “People like me have ideas. I don’t have the capital obviously but if younger India has the ideas, we can carve our way through.”

To achieve that potential, experts stress that policy makers must move quickly to improve access to quality education — only about 5% of the country’s workforce has undergone formal skills training. “That number is not acceptable, it has to be much higher,” said Quraishi. “Obviously we need to do a lot more.”

Concerns mainly center around India’s lesser developed, poorer northern states such as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, where education levels are lower and the population is growing more quickly compared to southern states that slowed their population growth rates faster as literacy levels improved.

“There are two things: One is skilling the new generation, the other is to enhance the skills of those who don’t have top of the line skills to be more productive. Identify areas where job opportunities are going to open up in the future,” Muttreja said.

She says while momentum has picked up, it is still slow. Pointing out that access to smartphones has increased exposure and fired aspirations through towns and remote villages, she warns that failure to provide enough opportunities “would lead to social strife, it would lead to a lot of young, unemployed, frustrated, unhappy people. So, we have to invest in them.”

That is also what many students want in a country where experts have long voiced concerns that most schools and universities do not pay enough attention to creative thinking but emphasize rote learning.

“Provide us the right skills, because what we are being taught right now in college is not very relevant in our jobs,” said Ishita Sud, an undergraduate student at one of Delhi University’s most prestigious colleges. As a huge vote bank, she hopes the government will pay more attention to the needs of its youth population.

India only has a narrow window to reap a demographic dividend from its young people — as education improves and incomes grow, women are having fewer children and birth rates have dropped below replacement level, according to latest data.

“Women want to have two or less than two children at an average. So, our population is going to decline very rapidly,” Muttreja said.

That means India, like China, will begin aging sooner rather than later.

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Pakistan Records Bus, Boat Accidents Sunday 

At least 41 people died Sunday in southern Pakistan when a bus traveling from Quetta to Karachi fell into a ravine in Balochistan’s Lasbela district.

Lasbela Assistant Commissioner Hamza Anjumk told Dawn, a Pakistani newspaper, “Due to speeding, the coach crashed into the pillar of a bridge while taking a U-turn near Lasbela. The vehicle subsequently careened into a ravine and then caught fire.” 

Also Sunday, 10 children died when their boat capsized in Tanda Dam lake in northwest Pakistan, authorities said.   

The Dawn newspaper reports that 17 children and a teacher were rescued and that four of the children are in critical condition. 

All the children were students at a madrassah, a religious school.  

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Afghan Soldier Seeks US Asylum And ‘American Dream’

In the months he was held in detention in Texas during his legal fight to remain in the United States, Afghan soldier Abdul Wasi Safi thought he would eventually be returned to his home country and likely meet death at the hands of the Taliban because of his work with the U.S. military.

But Friday, he stood a free man, filled with hope that the help he provided the U.S. military will ultimately help him secure asylum in the U.S.

Amid hugs from his brother and lawyers, Wasi Safi proudly smiled as he received an award from one of his supporters — Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democrat from Houston, Texas — that honored his military service to the U.S. He said he hoped that would be a harbinger of things to come for him in his new life in the U.S.

“I am hopeful about the next step in this process and one day being able to live the American dream,” Wasi Safi said at a news conference in Houston.

A long trek

For the past few months, Wasi Safi, 27, had been jailed by federal authorities after being arrested while crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in September near Eagle Pass, Texas.

An intelligence officer for the Afghan National Security Forces, he had fled Afghanistan following the withdrawal of U.S. forces in August 2021, fearing reprisals from the Taliban. After making his way last year to Brazil, he started a monthslong journey to the U.S. in summer 2022, crossing 10 countries on his treacherous trek.

Wasi Safi had been facing a federal immigrant charge. But a judge on Monday dropped the count at the request of prosecutors. He was freed from a detention center in Eden, Texas, Wednesday and reunited with his brother, Sami-ullah Safi, 29, who goes by Sami and lives in Houston.

“Today a wrong has been made right, and I would like to thank those who have worked tirelessly to secure justice for my brother,” said Sami Safi, who had been employed in Afghanistan by the U.S. military as a translator before he moved to the U.S.

A promise kept

The lawyers, bipartisan lawmakers and military organizations that have been working to free Wasi Safi say his case highlights how America’s chaotic military withdrawal from Afghanistan continues to harm Afghan citizens who helped the U.S. but were left behind.

Jackson Lee said being able to free Wasi Safi from detention and provide him help and resources as he applies for asylum is part of the promise the U.S. has long made to those such as Afghan soldiers who have helped the country’s military in its efforts to preserve democracy.

“America made a promise. Today we emphasize America kept her promise,” Jackson Lee said.

Wasi Safi, whose case was first reported by The Texas Tribune, had suffered serious injuries from beatings during his journey to the U.S., including damaged front teeth and hearing loss in his right ear. Sami Safi said as his brother’s asylum claim is reviewed, he will help him heal and get acclimated to living in the U.S.

Wasi Safi said part of what he hopes his American dream includes is being able to work and support those members of his family who remain in Afghanistan, including his parents, six sisters and two other brothers. He hopes that one day, they can all be reunited.

 

‘This is not the last person’

Nearly 76,000 Afghans who worked with American soldiers since 2001 as translators, interpreters and partners arrived in the U.S. on military planes after the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. But their immigration status remains unclear after Congress failed to pass a proposed law, the Afghan Adjustment Act, that would have solidified their legal residency status.

“Please do not forget that there are people who are still left behind. This is not the last person,” said Nisar Momand, a former interpreter for the U.S. government who left Afghanistan and now lives in Houston. “This is the first page of the book. Please raise your voice. There are hundreds of people. There are thousands of people that are every day being targeted.”

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Taliban Ban Afghan Girls From University Entrance Exam

Afghanistan’s Islamist Taliban have indefinitely barred girls from taking private university entrance exams, tightening their ban on women’s education in the country.

Ziaullah Hashmi, a spokesperson for the Taliban higher education ministry, Saturday confirmed to VOA they had sent out a letter to private Afghan universities across the country ordering them not to enroll female students for the upcoming spring semester.

The entrance exams are due to take place at the end of February. The letter warned those universities that did not enforce the edict would face legal action.

The Taliban have placed sweeping restrictions on women’s rights and freedom, excluding them from most areas of the workforce and banning them from using parks, gyms, and public bathhouses. They have barred girls from attending secondary schools beyond grade six since reclaiming power in August 2021.

Last month, the Islamist rulers abruptly closed universities to female students until further notice, and they forbade women from working for national and international non-governmental organizations.

The latest bans have sparked global outcry and demands for urgently reversing them. They also prompted the United Nations to send high-level delegations to Kabul this month to convey international concerns and urge Taliban leaders to ease the restrictions on women.

U.N. humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths traveled to the Afghan capital, Kabul, earlier this week to persuade the Taliban to lift the ban on female aid workers, warning it was undermining humanitarian programs in the war-ravaged country amid a prolonged drought.

Last week, U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, the highest-ranking woman official at the world body, led a high-level delegation to Afghanistan and met with senior Taliban officials to promote the rights of women and girls.

She told reporters in New York on Wednesday that the international community’s best leverage to persuade the Taliban to reverse curbs on Afghan women’s rights is the group’s desire for international recognition.

No foreign government has yet granted legitimacy to the de facto Afghan rulers, citing human rights concerns and their treatment of women.

The Taliban have refused to reverse the restrictions on women, saying they are in line with Afghan culture and Islamic law, or Shariah. The refusal has prompted donor nations to withhold financial assistance and retain the economic sanctions, with exceptions for humanitarian aid. Taliban and U.N. officials say the female education ban has kept more than 1 million girls out of schools.

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Indian Air Force Jets Crash

Two Indian Air Force jets have crashed while on a routine training operation.  

 

The air force said one of the three pilots involved in the crash Saturday morning has died.  

 

The crash occurred near Morena in Madhya Pradesh.

 

Local media reported the aircraft involved in the crash were a Sukhoi-30 and MIrage-2000 fighter jet. 

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Women Who Lived as Sex Slaves to Indian Goddess

Dedicated to an Indian goddess as a child, Huvakka Bhimappa’s years of sexual servitude began when her uncle took her virginity, raping her in exchange for a saree and some jewellery.

Bhimappa was not yet 10 years old when she became a “devadasi” — girls coerced by their parents into an elaborate wedding ritual with a Hindu deity, many of whom are then forced into illegal prostitution.

Devadasis are expected to live a life of religious devotion, forbidden from marrying other mortals, and forced at puberty to sacrifice their virginity to an older man, in return for money or gifts.

“In my case, it was my mother’s brother,” Bhimappa, now in her late 40s, told AFP.

What followed was years of sexual slavery, earning money for her family through encounters with other men in the name of serving the goddess.

Bhimappa eventually escaped her servitude but with no education, she earns around a dollar a day toiling in fields.

Her time as a devotee to the Hindu goddess Yellamma has also rendered her an outcast in the eyes of her community.

She had loved a man once, but it would have been unthinkable for her to ask him to marry.

“If I was not a devadasi, I would have had a family and children and some money. I would have lived well,” she said.

Devadasis have been an integral part of southern Indian culture for centuries and once enjoyed a respectable place in society.

Many were highly educated, trained in classical dance and music, lived comfortable lives and chose their own sexual partners.

“This notion of more or less religiously sanctioned sexual slavery was not part of the original system of patronage,” historian Gayathri Iyer told AFP.

Iyer said that in the 19th century, during the British colonial era, the divine pact between devadasi and goddess evolved into an institution of sexual exploitation.

It now serves as a means for poverty-stricken families from the bottom of India’s rigid caste hierarchy to relieve themselves of responsibility for their daughters.

The practice was outlawed in Bhimappa’s home state of Karnataka back in 1982, and India’s top court has described the devotion of young girls to temples as an “evil.”

Campaigners, however, say that young girls are still secretly inducted into devadasi orders.

Four decades after the state ban, there are still more than 70,000 devadasis in Karnataka, India’s human rights commission wrote last year.

‘I was alone’

Girls are commonly seen as burdensome and costly in India due to the tradition of wedding dowries.

By forcing daughters to become devadasis, poorer families gain a source of income and avoid the costs of marrying them off.

Many households around the small southern town of Saundatti — home to a revered Yellamma temple — believe that having a family member in the order can lift their fortunes or cure the illness of a loved one.

It was at this temple that Sitavva D. Jodatti was enjoined to marry the goddess when she was eight years old.

Her sisters had all married other men, and her parents decided to dedicate her to Yellamma in order to provide for them.

“When other people get married, there is a bride and a groom. When I realized I was alone, I started crying,” Jodatti, 49, told AFP.

Her father eventually fell ill, and she was pulled out of school to engage in sex work and help pay for his treatment.

“By the age of 17, I had two kids,” she said.

Rekha Bhandari, a fellow former devadasi, said they had been subjected to a practice of “blind tradition” that had ruined their lives.

She was forced into the order after the death of her mother and was 13 when a 30-year-old man took her virginity. She fell pregnant soon after.

“A normal delivery was difficult. The doctor yelled at my family, saying that I was too young to give birth,” the 45-year-old told AFP.

“I had no understanding.”

‘Many women have died’

Years of unsafe sex exposed many devadasis to sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.

“I know of women who are infected and now it has passed on to their children,” an activist who works with devadasis, who asked not to be named, told AFP.

“They hide it and live with it in secrecy. Many women have died.”

Parents are occasionally prosecuted for allowing their daughters to be inducted as devadasis, and women who leave the order are given meagre government pensions of 1,500 rupees ($18) per month.

Nitesh Patil, a civil servant who administers Saundatti, told AFP that there had been no “recent instances” of women being dedicated to temples.

India’s rights commission last year ordered Karnataka and several other Indian states to outline what they were doing to prevent the practice, after a media investigation found that devadasi inductions were still widespread.

The stigma around their pasts means women who leave their devadasi order often endure lives as outcasts or objects of ridicule, and few ever marry.

Many find themselves destitute or struggling to survive on poorly paid manual labor and farming work.

Jodatti now heads a civil society group which helped extricate the women AFP spoke to from their lives of servitude and provides support to former devadasis.

She said many of her contemporaries had several years ago become engrossed by the #MeToo movement and the personal revelations of celebrity women around the world that revealed them as survivors of sexual abuse.

“We watch the news and sometimes when we see famous people… we understand their situation is much like ours. They have suffered the same. But they continue to live freely,” she said.

“We have gone through the same experience, but we don’t get the respect they get.

“Devadasi women are still looked down upon.”

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UN Weekly Roundup: Jan. 21-27, 2023 

Editor’s note: Here is a fast take on what the international community has been up to this week, as seen from the United Nations’ perch.

UN deputy chief says Taliban’s desire for recognition is bargaining chip on rights

U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said Wednesday that the international community’s best leverage to persuade the Taliban to reverse restrictions on Afghan women’s rights is the group’s desire for international recognition. She told reporters that the U.N. and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation are discussing holding a conference in March in the region on women in the Muslim world. Mohammed led a high-level U.N. delegation to Afghanistan this past week.

Nuclear watchdog warns Iran has enough material for several nuclear bombs

International Atomic Energy Agency Chief Rafael Grossi warned Tuesday that Iran has accumulated “enough nuclear material for several nuclear weapons.” Grossi told the European Parliament’s security and defense subcommittee in Brussels that his agency is no longer monitoring Iran’s nuclear program because the regime has disconnected 27 of the agency’s cameras installed at its declared nuclear sites. Grossi said he plans to travel to Tehran, Iran, next month.

No progress on international force for Haiti

The U.N. and the government of Haiti reiterated their appeal Tuesday for an international force to quickly deploy to the island nation to help subdue an unprecedented level of gang violence that has terrorized the population. In early October, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres backed a request from the Haitian government to send a force to address escalating insecurity and a deepening humanitarian crisis.

2023 global economic forecast looks gloomy

U.N. economists forecast a gloomy and uncertain outlook this year, with the global economy projected to grow at a very sluggish rate. The 2023 World Economic Situation and Prospects report, issued Wednesday, says a series of severe shocks have reduced global economic output to its lowest level in years, leaving many economies at risk of falling into recession. In good news, the authors say inflation appears to have peaked in some of the more advanced economies, and East and South Asia emerged as the report’s bright spots for growth.

Myanmar poppy production grows since military coup

A report from the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) says Myanmar’s farmers are flocking back to opium poppy cultivation amid rising prices for the contraband crop and an economic decline that is wiping out jobs, reversing nearly a decade of poppy decreases. Myanmar is the world’s second-largest producer of opium, after Afghanistan, and the main source for most of East and Southeast Asia. UNODC says many people have resorted to poppy cultivation because jobs and investment have dried up following the military coup two years ago.

In brief

— U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield is on a mission to Ghana, Mozambique and Kenya this week to advance joint priorities following December’s U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit. Her tour is focused on regional security issues, food insecurity, humanitarian issues, and supporting African efforts to mitigate climate change, a senior administration official said.

— This week, World Food Program Chief David Beasley is in Syria, where he raised the alarm on unprecedented levels of hunger. He said 12 million people do not know where their next meal is coming from, while an additional 2.9 million are at risk of sliding into hunger. Overall, due to conflict, COVID-19 and an economic crisis, 70% of the population might soon be unable to feed their families.

— The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said in a report released Friday that “there are reasonable grounds to believe” that Syria’s Air Forces perpetrated a chemical weapons attack on April 7, 2018, in Douma, Syria. The OPCW said at least one helicopter of the Syrian “Tiger Forces” elite unit dropped two yellow cylinders containing toxic chlorine gas on two apartment buildings in a residential area of Douma, killing at least 43 people and affecting dozens more. U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric condemned the use of chemical weapons and said, “it is imperative that those who use chemical weapons are identified and held accountable.”

Quote of note

“You have to remember that what happened before the Taliban came back was a huge amount of hope, and an expression of that hope with many women who got an education, who were in decision-making roles, who were leaders in Afghanistan, and now that’s dashed. And when that happens, the anxiety and the level of fear amongst women and their future is huge, it’s palpable.”

— U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed to reporters on the situation of Afghan women under the Taliban​

What we are watching next week

February 1 marks two years since the Myanmar military overthrew the democratically elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, leading to protests and a crackdown on human rights. Since the coup, leaders and thousands of pro-democracy protesters have died or been jailed, and the humanitarian situation has worsened.

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No Evidence Russia Turning to Taliban for Arms, White House Says

Russia may be turning to more countries to resupply its military fighting in Ukraine, but the White House says it has no evidence to support published reports claiming that Moscow has asked the Afghan Taliban for help.

“I can’t confirm this report,” John Kirby, coordinator for strategic communications at the National Security Council, told VOA during a briefing Friday. “But if it’s true, it certainly would fly in the face of what the Taliban say their goals are,” he added, pointing to the Taliban’s desire to be recognized internationally as the legitimate government in Afghanistan.

A 2022 Pentagon report confirmed that the fall of the U.S.-backed Afghan government following the August 2021 chaotic withdrawal of Western forces gave Taliban fighters access to more than $7 billion worth of American military equipment, what was left of $18.6 billion worth of weapons and other gear provided to the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces from 2005 through August 2021.

The stockpile includes aircraft, vehicles, munitions, guns, communication equipment and other gear that Kirby and other officials emphasized was the property of the now-defunct Afghan government, not the United States. Most of the equipment used by American troops in Afghanistan was retrograded or destroyed, according to the Pentagon.

“We don’t have any indication of exactly where all those systems [in Taliban hands] are, how they’re being used,” Kirby said. “Certainly, we don’t have any indications that the Taliban is willing to export them.”

Zia Ahmad Takal, deputy spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, denied that the Taliban are providing Russia with weapons. “This report is a lie,” he told VOA.

Attractive target

American weapons now in the hands of the Taliban are an attractive target for various actors looking for firepower.

“You’re going to have a lot of outside actors trying to poke around and get access to all of these weapons,” said Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Program at the Wilson Center, a global policy research group in Washington.

“Whether the Taliban would actually be willing to provide these weapons to Russia, that to me seems a bit hard to believe,” he told VOA.

While an offer from Moscow cannot be ruled out, Kugelman said the Taliban are focused on building up their own military capacity. The group faces internal security threats from terrorist groups such as the Islamic State group and various others, including the National Resistance Front.

Additionally, the Taliban armory may not be of much use for President Vladimir Putin’s war ambitions, since there aren’t many weapons that would be useful in the war in Ukraine, where Russia relies heavily on long-range attacks using unguided weapons, like howitzers and artillery rockets.

What Moscow needs most are missiles and Soviet-standard artillery ammunition, neither of which the U.S. left in Afghanistan, said Mark Cancian, a senior adviser with the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.

“Most of the weaponry that the United States left is probably inoperable and badly deteriorated for lack of trained maintainers and spare parts,” Cancian told VOA. “This is particularly true of complex weapons like helicopters or tanks, even those that are Soviet standard.”

Moscow might be able to use military helicopters, including the Soviet-designed Mi-17 that the Taliban currently possess, as well as a limited number of American-made Black Hawks and light planes, but the chances are slim.

“Why would they give them up?” said Jonathan Schroden, director of the Countering Threats and Challenges Program at the Center for Naval Analyses in Arlington County, Virginia. “They’d be giving up the bulk of their air capacity, and I just don’t see it being in the Taliban interests to do that.” 

Schroden said that the rest of the equipment, including Humvees, heavy machine guns and ammunition, are not necessarily compatible with Russian logistics and maintenance capabilities.

“I don’t understand why they would add that to their level of difficulty to what they’re already dealing with,” he said.

Almost a year into its invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has turned to other states, including Iran and North Korea, to sustain its military.

Washington has placed sanctions on Tehran for providing Moscow with Iranian-manufactured drones and is attempting to add sanctions on North Korea for supplying battlefield missiles and rockets to the Russian mercenary group Wagner for use in Ukraine.

Tehran has said the drones were sent before Russia’s February invasion, and Moscow has denied its forces used Iranian drones in Ukraine. North Korea and Wagner have also rejected U.S. allegations.

Sayed Aziz Rahman contributed to this report.

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Gunman Kills Security Chief at Azerbaijan’s Iranian Embassy

A gunman has killed the head of security at Azerbaijan’s embassy in Iran.
The shooter, armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle, also wounded two other people.

Police in Tehran say a suspect has been arrested.

The suspect, according to Agence France-Presse, is an Iranian man who says his wife has been held at the embassy for nine months.

Tasnim news agency reports the man entered the embassy with two small children and his attack on the embassy may have been due to personal issues.

Some information in this report came from Reuters and Agence France-Presse.

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World Bank: Afghan Revenue Collection, Exports Remain Strong  

The World Bank has delivered a surprisingly upbeat assessment of the Afghan economy in the first nine months of the fiscal year 2022, citing high exports, a stable exchange rate and strong revenue collection under Taliban rule.

The report stands in stark contrast to regular reports from U.N. agencies and NGOs of near-universal poverty and widespread hunger in the country since the Taliban takeover in August 2022 led to a cutoff of most international aid.

That and the strict enforcement of international sanctions on Taliban leaders and isolation of the Afghan banking sector had pushed the war-ravaged economy to the brink, but effective anti-corruption efforts and other measures seem to have enabled the Islamist rulers to contain the downward slide.

The World Bank assessment released this week noted that inflationary pressure has eased since July of last year, decelerating by half to 9.1 % in November, while most basic food and non-food items remain widely available. The report attributed the decline in inflation to lower global oil and food prices, along with a stable exchange rate.

In what may be a peace dividend from the end of fighting in the country, Afghanistan exported $1.7 billion worth of goods, an increase of approximately 90% compared to the full year 2021, the bank reported. Pakistan, with 65%, and India, with 20%, remain the two main export destinations for Afghan vegetable products, mineral products, and textiles.

The report noted that up-to-date import data was unavailable, but the January-June 2022 data shows the country imported $2.9 billion of goods. Neighboring Pakistan, China, and Iran are identified as the main import origins.

The World Bank assessment said revenue collection had remained strong, reaching $1.54 billion between March and December 2022, in line with 2020 results.

A major chunk of the revenues came from taxes collected at borders and non-tax sources. A rise in coal mining royalties and fees likely drives the increase in Afghan ministries’ revenue, the report found.

In other findings, the World Bank report said nominal and real wages rose slightly in December. It noted that most Afghan civil servants have received salaries regularly, with women reporting they are being paid more regularly than men over the last two months. The civil servants say in the survey the key challenges when trying to withdraw their salaries are the banks are crowded and short of cash, which makes it difficult for them to deal with on a regular basis.

The bank did not address recent reporting from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, which said that 97% of Afghans live in poverty, two-thirds of the population need aid to survive, and 20 million people face acute hunger.

But Afghan analyst Torek Farhadi, a former adviser for the World Bank and the IMF, said the economy “is limping along” because of the injection in cash of humanitarian aid by the United Nations.

“It maintains the value of the Afghani [local currency] as U.S. dollars are converted into the Afghani currency in the Kabul exchange market,” he told VOA in written comments. “The U.N. aid has been able to maintain the status quo.”

Farhadi noted the country continues to face difficulty in attracting foreign investment, at least in part because the Afghan private sector has been suffering from a lack of transparency about Taliban economic policies.

“Private investment requires a climate free of pressure,” he emphasized. “Nobody dares to make long-term investment plans as Taliban trade and investment legal framework is non-published and unpredictable.” A thriving private sector is crucial to provide jobs to the educated Afghan youth to discourage them from leaving the country, Farhadi noted.

The Taliban have imposed their harsh interpretation of Islamic law to govern the country.

“Families with daughters also want to leave for countries where there is education if they can afford it. Afghanistan’s economy is depressed, and Taliban have difficulty creating confidence,” Farhadi said.

The Islamist rulers have excluded women from most areas of the workforce and banned them from using parks, gyms, and public bathhouses. They have barred girls from attending secondary schools beyond grade six.

Last month, the Taliban closed universities to female students until further notice, and they forbade women from working for national and international nongovernmental organizations.

The international community has refused to grant legitimacy to the de facto rulers over human rights concerns, mainly stemming from bans on women’s work and education.

The refusal by the Taliban to reverse the restrictions has prompted donor nations to withhold financial assistance and retain the economic sanctions, with exceptions for humanitarian aid.

Afghanistan’s population was estimated to pass 43 million in 2022, and a staggering 28.3 million people will need urgent humanitarian assistance this year in order to survive prolonged drought-like conditions, according to latest U.N. assessments.

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Taliban Refill Afghan Jails

Less than two years after releasing all prisoners held by the previous Afghan government, including suspected terrorists, the Taliban are rapidly refilling prisons with new inmates.

Over the past 18 months, de facto Taliban authorities detained more than 29,000 individuals on various charges such as theft, kidnapping, murder and moral crimes according to country’s top prison official.

“We have released some 15,000 inmates,” Mohammad Yusuf Mistari, the Taliban’s director of prisons, told VOA in WhatsApp messages. “Currently, there are approximately 14,000 inmates in the Islamic Emirate’s jails.”

Among the prisoners, up to 1,100 are women.

Taliban officials claim they have no political prisoners and that all the prisoners are held on criminal charges — a claim not confirmed by independent organizations.

But groups like Human Rights watch say the Taliban have opted for killing criminals associated with armed opposition groups — Islamic State and other Afghan militias that have increasingly posed serious security threats to the fledging Islamist regime —instead of keeping them in jails.

Under the Islamic Emirate’s strict interpretation of Sharia, acts such as drinking alcohol or extramarital relationships are considered criminal and carry severe penalties, while homosexuality and sodomy are punishable by death.

Since November, the Taliban have restarted public displays of punishment. Thieves have had their hands chopped off, adulterers have been flogged, and those found guilty of murder have been shot and killed in front of hundreds of male spectators.

More than 100 men and women have been publicly whipped, and at least two men have been executed so far, according to the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), which monitors human rights in the country.

“Such barbaric punishments — often carried out against persons for activities that should not even be considered crimes, such as listening to music — constitute torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, and are prohibited under international law,” Patricia Gossman, associate Asia director at Human Rights Watch, told VOA.

Redoing torture

Various forms of torture have been widely practiced at formal and informal detention centers and jails in Afghanistan, according to UNAMA and various rights groups.

Hundreds of Taliban fighters reportedly died in extremely brutal detention conditions in late 2001 and early 2002 during U.S.-led military campaigns that toppled the Taliban with the help of local Afghan militias, according to reports by the New York Times and Physicians for Human Rights.

Torture of detainees was also prevalent under the former Afghan government, which incarcerated more than 30,000 individuals, a large number of whom were alleged Taliban insurgents, according to U.N. reports dating back to at least 2011.

Last year, the Taliban produced a film documenting the bitter experiences of some prisoners held at the Parwan Detention Facility beside Bagram Air Base, which the U.S. military operated until 2012 when it was transferred to the Afghan government.

“The Taliban seem to be repeating all the mistakes and abuses of the past, including those they complained that the Republic [former Afghan government] had been responsible for, like torture,” Gossman said.

Mistari, the Taliban’s top official for prisons, refuted the torture allegations.

“Our leaders have given us a 39-articles guidance in which it’s said that we should treat inmates nicely,” he said, adding that the guidance also states if a guard or a jail official is seen taunting prisoners, he should be transferred elsewhere.

“We have nothing to do with their crimes. We are only there to protect the prisoners, feed them and keep them,” Mistari added.

Food, cold

Maintaining the prisons and feeding the large inmate population has long been a challenge in Afghanistan.

The previous Afghan government received financial and technical support from international donors to manage its prisons and detention facilities.

Facing strict international sanctions, the Taliban appears to be unable to run the jails, feed and care for the large inmate population.

Even outside the Taliban jails, an overwhelming majority of Afghans face hunger.

Throughout 2022, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) provided three meals daily for some 12,000 inmates in Afghanistan.

“The ICRC continues to work with Afghan authorities to ensure humane and dignified conditions of detention across Afghanistan,” Lucien Christen, an ICRC spokesperson, told VOA.

Moreover, the humanitarian organization has donated blankets, shawls, jackets and socks to keep 20,000 prisoners warm during the frigid winter temperatures.

Cold weather has killed more than 120 Afghans over the past two weeks, Taliban authorities have confirmed.

Both UNAMA and ICRC have access to prisons in Afghanistan for monitoring purposes.

“De facto authorities do appear to be seeking to fulfil their obligations in relation to the treatment of detainees,” UNAMA reported in July 2022. “Progress is hindered by financial constraints, resulting at times in inadequate food, medical care and hygiene supplies for detainees, and the cessation of vocational education and training programs for prisoners that were previously funded by the international community.”

Some senior Taliban leaders, including current ministers and governors, have a history of incarceration inside and outside Afghanistan, including at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp, a U.S. military prison set up in 2002 where only one Afghan inmate remains.

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UN Official: Use Taliban’s Desire for International Recognition as Leverage 

U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said Wednesday that the international community’s best leverage to persuade the Taliban to reverse restrictions on Afghan women’s rights is the group’s desire for international recognition.

“I went into Afghanistan thinking perhaps the most conservative of them [Taliban leaders] didn’t care about recognition — they do,” Mohammed told reporters of her mission there. “Recognition is one leverage that we have and should hold on to.”

The deputy secretary-general returned Tuesday from a two-week mission that took her and her delegation, including the head of U.N. Women and the deputy political and peacebuilding chief, to several Muslim countries, as well as to the Afghan cities of Kabul, Kandahar and Herat. She also met in the region with former Afghan President Hamid Karzai and former Chief Executive Officer Abdullah Abdullah.

She said it is clear the Taliban want recognition, laying out to her what they view as their achievements – claiming to have eradicated corruption and stopped poppy production while extending a general amnesty. However, a U.N. report released in November found that the area under poppy cultivation has increased under Taliban rule.

“All of this, we said, was not sufficient in terms of its implementation,” Mohammed said she told them.

Mohammed, who is Muslim, said one of the biggest challenges in dealing with the group, which “is loyal to the emir and the emirate,” is how to bring them “from the 13th century to the 21st.”

Decrees

She noted that as the Taliban have taken away rights, they have said they would later revisit the issue. Mohammed pressed officials for a specific timeline and said she was told only “soon.”

“And for them, what they want to do is create an environment that protects women,” she said. “Their definition of protection would be, I would say, ours of oppression.”

She said those “protections” include rules on education, school curriculum, work and dress codes that she sees as “red flags.”

The deputy U.N. chief said the Taliban are eager to keep international humanitarian assistance flowing, despite their widely condemned December 24 ban on Afghan women working with domestic and international aid groups. Some international NGOs suspended their work after the decree.

The World Food Program estimates nearly 20 million Afghans are acutely food-insecure, including more than 6 million people on the brink of faminelike conditions.

A few days before the work edict, the Taliban forbade females from attending school beyond the sixth grade.

Mohammed said she was relieved that a third decree they feared might come down this month, or even during their mission, barring foreign women from working with international organizations, had so far not happened.

“I don’t say that it won’t, but clearly the pressure that we are putting on has stopped that rollback as quickly. … We will continue to put that pressure on and engage,” she said.

International conference

Mohammed said discussions are underway for an international conference to be co-hosted by the U.N. and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in March in the region on women in the Muslim world.

“This would bring in the issues of Afghanistan, but also the region,” the deputy secretary-general said. “I often say this, when Malala [Yousafzai] was shot, she was shot in Pakistan. So there is a region[al] problem. There is a region that also needs to come to the front with pushing for the rights of women in Islam.”

As for Afghan women, Mohammed insisted the international community will not abandon them.

“It’s not when it gets hard that we drop off,” she said. “It’s when it gets hard that they see more of us, and we are there in solidarity with them.”

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Russia, Pakistan Discuss ‘Practical Engagement’ With Afghan Taliban

Russia and Pakistan emphasized in bilateral talks Wednesday the need for “practical engagement” with Afghanistan’s Taliban but ruled out formal recognition of the Islamist rulers until they address international concerns over women’s rights and inclusive governance.

The Russian presidential envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, led his delegation in the talks with Pakistani officials in Islamabad and briefed them on his meetings earlier this month with the Taliban in Kabul.

 

Kabulov said Moscow was continuing to engage with the Taliban but was not considering granting legitimacy to the de facto Afghan rulers “for the time being,” official Pakistani sources privy to Wednesday’s meetings told VOA.

The sources quoted the Russian envoy as saying he “advised” the Islamist Taliban to move toward creating a politically inclusive government and easing curbs on women, saying that otherwise there can be no movement forward on the issue of their legitimacy, nor can Afghanistan get any substantial support from the world.

A brief Pakistani statement posted on Twitter after Kabulov’s meeting with Deputy Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said the two sides “emphasized [the] need for practical engagement with the interim Afghan government.”

The Pakistani side also reiterated that Islamabad was not considering giving the Taliban formal recognition and would do so only collectively with the international community, the sources said.

The foreign ministry in a formal statement issued later offered few details of the meeting and did not mention the issue of recognition of the de facto Afghan authorities.

The statement quoted Khar as urging the international community “to continue extending assistance and support, in order to address urgent humanitarian needs and to provide a sustainable pathway for Afghanistan’s prosperity and development.”

The Taliban reclaimed power in Afghanistan in August 2021 following the end of almost 20 years of U.S.-led foreign military intervention in the conflict-torn South Asian nation.

The world has not yet formally recognized the male-only Taliban government, mainly over human rights concerns and curbs it has placed on women’s access to work and education.

While the United States and Western nations at large shifted their Afghan diplomatic missions to Qatar after the Taliban captured Kabul, several countries, including Pakistan, Russia, China, Turkey and Iran, have kept their embassies open and maintain close contacts with the hard-line rulers.

Chinese support

Last week, newly appointed Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang spoke with his Taliban counterpart, Amir Khan Muttaqi, and reaffirmed Beijing’s support for the group to establish what he called “a broad and inclusive political structure” in Kabul.

Afghan women have been excluded from most areas of the workforce and have been banned from using parks, gyms and public bath houses. The Taliban have refused to reopen secondary schools for girls beyond grade six since returning to power.

The hard-line Taliban reject criticism of their administration, saying the government represents all ethnic and political groups in Afghanistan. They also strongly defend restrictions on women, saying the policies are in line with Afghan culture and Islamic law, or Shariah.

Last month, the Taliban authorities closed universities to female students until further notice, and they forbade women from working for national and international nongovernmental organizations.

The Taliban’s curbs on Afghan female aid workers have forced major international charity groups to halt some of their programs in a country where 97% of the estimated population of 40 million lives below the poverty line and nearly half of them need humanitarian assistance.

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BBC Film About India’s PM Modi, 2002 Riots Draws Government Ire

Days after India blocked a BBC documentary that examines Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s role during 2002 anti-Muslim riots and banned people from sharing it online, authorities are scrambling to halt screenings of the film at colleges and universities and restrict clips of it on social media. Critics decry the move by as an assault on press freedom.

Tensions escalated in the capital, New Delhi, on Wednesday at Jamia Millia University where a student group said it planned to screen the banned documentary, prompting dozens of police equipped with tear gas and riot gear to gather outside campus gates.

Police, some in plain clothes, scuffled with protesting students and detained at least half a dozen of them, who were taken away in a van.

Jawaharlal Nehru University in the capital cut off power and the internet on its campus on Tuesday before the documentary was scheduled to be screened by a students’ union. Authorities said it would disturb peace on campus, but students nonetheless watched the documentary on their laptops and mobile phones after sharing it on messaging services like Telegram and WhatsApp.

The documentary has caused a storm at other Indian universities too.

Authorities at the University of Hyderabad, in India’s south, have begun a probe after a student group showed the banned documentary earlier this week. In the southern state of Kerala, workers from Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party held demonstrations on Tuesday after some student groups affiliated with rival political parties defied the ban and screened the film.

The two-part documentary “India: The Modi Question” has not been broadcast in India by the BBC, but India’s federal government blocked it over the weekend and banned people from sharing clips on social media, citing emergency powers under its information technology laws. Twitter and YouTube complied with the request and removed many links to the documentary.

The first part of the documentary, released last week by the BBC for its U.K. audiences, revives the most controversial episode of Modi’s political career when he was the chief minister of western Gujarat state in 2002. It focuses on bloody anti-Muslim riots in which more than 1,000 people were killed.

The riots have long hounded Modi because of allegations that authorities under his watch allowed and even encouraged the bloodshed. Modi has denied the accusations, and the Supreme Court has said it found no evidence to prosecute him. Last year, the country’s top court dismissed a petition filed by a Muslim victim questioning Modi’s exoneration.

The first part of the BBC documentary relies on interviews with victims of the riots, journalists and rights activists, who say Modi looked the other way during the riots. It cites, for the first time, a secret British diplomatic investigation that concluded Modi was “directly responsible” for the “climate of impunity.”

The documentary includes the testimony of then-British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who says the British investigation found that the violence by Hindu nationalists aimed to “purge Muslims from Hindu areas” and that it had all the “hallmarks of an ethnic cleansing.”

Suspicions that Modi quietly supported the riots led the U.S., U.K. and E.U. to deny him a visa, a move that has since been reversed.

India’s Foreign Ministry last week called the documentary a “propaganda piece designed to push a particularly discredited narrative” that lacks objectivity and slammed it for “bias” and “a continuing colonial mindset.” Kanchan Gupta, a senior adviser in the government’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, denounced it as “anti-India garbage.”

The BBC in a statement said the documentary was “rigorously researched” and involved a wide range of voices and opinions.

“We offered the Indian Government a right to reply to the matters raised in the series — it declined to respond,” the statement said.

The second part of the documentary, released Tuesday in the U.K., “examines the track record of Narendra Modi’s government following his re-election in 2019,” according to the film’s description on the BBC website.

In recent years, India’s Muslim minority has been at the receiving end of violence from Hindu nationalists, emboldened by a prime minister who has mostly stayed mum on such attacks since he was first elected in 2014.

The ban has set off a wave of criticism from opposition parties and rights groups that slammed it as an attack against press freedom. It also drew more attention to the documentary, sparking scores of social media users to share clips on WhatsApp, Telegram and Twitter.

“You can ban, you can suppress the press, you can control the institutions … but the truth is the truth. It has a nasty habit of coming out,” Rahul Gandhi, a leader in the opposition Congress party, told reporters at a press conference Tuesday.

Mahua Moitra, a lawmaker from the Trinamool Congress political party, on Tuesday tweeted a new link after a previous one was taken down. “Good, bad, or ugly — we decide. Govt doesn’t tell us what to watch,” Moitra said in her tweet, which was still up Wednesday morning.

Human Rights Watch said the ban reflected a broader crackdown on minorities under the Modi government, which the rights group said has frequently invoked draconian laws to muzzle criticism.

Critics say press freedom in India has declined in recent years and the country fell eight places, to 150 out of 180 countries, in last year’s Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders. It accuses Modi’s government of silencing criticism on social media, particularly on Twitter, a charge senior leaders of the governing party have denied.

Modi’s government has regularly pressured Twitter to restrict or ban content it deems critical of the prime minister or his party. Last year, it threatened to arrest Twitter staff in the country over their refusal to ban accounts run by critics after implementing sweeping new regulations for technology and social media companies.

The ban on the BBC documentary comes after a proposal from the government to give its Press Information Bureau and other “fact-checking” agencies powers to take down news deemed “fake or false” from digital platforms.

The Editors Guild of India urged the government to withdraw the proposal, saying such a change would be akin to censorship.

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Pakistan Arrests Senior Leader from Ex-PM Imran Khan’s Party

Police in Pakistan arrested early Wednesday a senior leader of former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s political party on charges of threatening the chief of the elections overseeing body and other government officials.

The arrest of Fawad Chaudhry, an outspoken critic of the government, is a major setback for his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, in which he serves as vice president. The party quickly condemned the arrest and demanded his release.

Khan also denounced the arrest, claiming on Twitter that it left no doubt that Pakistan has become a place “devoid of rule of law.” He urged followers to “stand up for our fundamental rights” to prevent the country from drifting toward “a point of no return.”

The arrest took place during a predawn raid at Chaudhry’s house in Lahore, the capital of eastern Punjab province, his family said. Shireen Mazari, a spokesperson for Khan’s party, said Chaudhry was taken in handcuffs straight to court by police in Lahore.

Chaudhry’s wife, Hiba Fawad, told reporters that security forces were rough with her husband, pushed him into a vehicle and whisked him away.

“There is a procedure to follow if you want to arrest someone,” she said. “It cannot happen that ten or twelve people enter a house, detain someone, throw him into a vehicle and take him away without telling the family where are they taking him.”

Footage released later by the party showed Chaudhry’s supporters gathered at the court and throwing rose petals at him as police led him toward a courtroom.

Angered over his arrest, hundreds of Chaudhry’s supporters blocked a key highway in Jehlum, his home city in Punjab province, to demand his release.

In a statement, Islamabad police said Chaudhry was arrested on a complaint from the Election Commission of Pakistan on charges of threatening the head of the elections overseeing body, Sikandar Sultan Raja, and other officials. The threats were meant to prevent them from performing their duties and incite people to violence against them, police said.

On Tuesday, Chaudhry criticized the elections overseeing body for appointing a veteran journalist, Mohsin Naqvi, as caretaker chief minister in Punjab. Khan’s party and its allies were in power in Punjab and held majority seats in the provincial assembly but dissolved the house earlier this month, a move that apparently sought to pressure the government in Islamabad.

The dissolution of the provincial assembly set in motion snap elections, which under the constitution are to be held within 90 days.

Chaudhry on Tuesday told reporters that Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif’s government could arrest Khan at any time. Khan, who remains popular with a huge grassroots following, was ousted in a no-confidence vote in Parliament last April and has been leading the opposition since.

A former cricket star turned Islamist politician, Khan was wounded in a gun attack while leading a rally toward the capital, Islamabad, last November. One of Khan’s supporters was killed and several others were wounded in the shooting.

In October, the elections commission disqualified Khan from holding public office for five years after finding he had unlawfully sold state gifts and concealed assets as premier. Khan denies the charge and has filed a motion with a court to challenge the commission.

Khan has also claimed that he was toppled in a plot by Sharif and Washington, claims they both deny.

Along with the provincial assembly in Punjab, Khan’s allies earlier this month also dissolved the legislature in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf also had majority seats. The party has demanded early federal elections, which Sharif’s government has rejected, saying the vote will be held as scheduled later this year.

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US Lawmakers Condemn Harassment of Kyrgyz Media

U.S. lawmakers have called on Kyrgyzstan authorities to lift restrictions on Radio Azattyq after renewed efforts by authorities to have it permanently closed.

The Ministry of Culture appealed to a court in the capital, Bishkek, to have the media outlet terminated. The order is related to September 2022 coverage by the outlet about an armed conflict on the Kyrgyz-Tajik border, which the ministry said included “ambiguous material against national interests.”

In October 2022, authorities blocked access to the media outlet’s website for two months over the report. That order was extended in December, with the ministry at the time saying the block will remain in effect until the specified material is removed. Authorities also froze the media outlet’s bank account.

The ministry said that Radio Azattyq’s actions are in violation of the country’s media, which prevents propaganda of war, violence and cruelty, national and religious discrimination, and intolerance to other peoples and nations.

Radio Azattyq is an affiliate of VOA’s sister network Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

RFE/RL President Jamie Fly said that after studying the material, the network concluded that journalism standards were not violated.

“Pressure on independent media casts a shadow on Kyrgyzstan’s democracy,” Fly said in a statement. He added that the broadcaster would use “all possible legal means to continue our activities in Kyrgyzstan.

U.S. Senators Bob Menendez and Jim Risch, who are chair and ranking member of the Committee on Foreign Relations, called on Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov to stop putting pressure on Radio Azattyq and other independent media.

In a statement published Friday, the senators said that the action violates international standards of freedom of speech as well as the country’s constitution.

The senators said “the decisions to block Radio Azattyk websites indefinitely and freeze the service’s bank account jeopardizes [Kyrgyzstan’s] international reputation as a beacon of free speech in Central Asia.”

The statement highlighted President Japarov’s commitment to protect human rights and the rule of law and called on him to “create an opportunity for independent mass media so that Kyrgyz journalists can work freely.”

In response, the president’s press secretary, Erbol Sultanbaev, stated that “Kyrgyzstan is a free, democratic country with all the conditions for the full-fledged activity of independent media.”

Sultanbaev said that the only requirement is that everyone observe the current laws.

Kyrgyz media analysts see the blocking of Radio Azattyq as “a deliberate step taken by the government to strengthen the autocratic regime in Kyrgyzstan.”

In a joint statement, local journalists said that the broadcaster had reported only on information distributed by the official state agencies related to the conflict.

“The lawsuit alleges that the host of the program received comments from both sides. In this case, the behavior of the editors is worthy of the professional standards of the work of journalists,” the statement read.

In an interview with the Kloop news agency, media expert Gulnura Toralieva said that by putting pressure on Azattyq, the government reduces the space for pluralism, hides the shortcomings of its activity and tries to intimidate other media.

“If we look at the steps taken by the government, it seems that actions for freedom of speech will be much more difficult. Demanding freedom of speech is becoming more and more difficult,” Toralieva was cited as saying in Kloop.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists also condemned the ministry request as “a black mark in the history of freedom of speech in the country.”

“The Kyrgyz government should withdraw its application to close Azattyq Radio, cancel the ban on the publication’s website, open the bank account and stop all pressure on the mass media,” Gulnoza Said, who is the nonprofit’s Europe program coordinator, said in a statement.

In its annual global report released in January, Human Rights Watch said that “despite promises to uphold human rights and freedoms, Kyrgyz authorities restricted critical voices and civil society.”

The report cited the blocking of Radio Azattyq and two other media outlets in 2022 and said that press freedom “came under siege” with criminal cases filed against independent journalists and bloggers.

A hearing related to Radio Azattyq’s case is due to take place in district court in February.

This article originated in VOA’s Uzbek Service.

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Climate Change Drives Kashmir Spice Farmers Indoors

Abdul Majeed Wani lifts a plastic box from the ground and places it on one of the steel shelves adjacent to the walls of his house in the Pampore area of Pulwama district on the Indian side of Kashmir. 

The 65-year-old farmer has dozens of such boxes lying under an open sky. He has planted saffron corms inside boxes filled with soil. 

“I started indoor, or vertical, saffron farming a few years ago,” said Wani. “I was one among a few people who took the risk of cultivating the treasure spices using the modern technique.” 

Saffron, also known as red-gold because of its color and high cost, is cultivated at high altitude, including Indian administered Kashmir’s Pampore region. 

The decision to cultivate saffron inside a living room, Wani said, turned out to be fruitful. He reaps half a kilogram of the king of all spices annually inside a space that outdoors would require 400 square meters of land.

“The strains are of high quality in comparison to ones cultivated in the field,” Wani told VOA. “One can produce as much quantity of saffron as he desires, but all he needs to have is a good number of corms,” he said, noting that a room, racks and plastic trays are sufficient to grow the crop. 

 

Switching indoors 

 

The production of saffron in the Himalayan region, according to farmers, had decreased over the last decade because of climate change.

The rapid urbanization in the town also took a toll because land for cultivation shrank from 5,700 hectares in the late 1990s to 3,700 hectares in 2020. 

The Jammu and Kashmir government took the initiative to boost the saffron industry by developing an irrigation plan in 2010, but it was not implemented.

To revive the lost glory of the sector, local scientists affiliated with the Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, or SKUAST, “demonstrated indoor saffron cultivation” at its Advanced Research Station for Saffron and Seed Spices, or ARSSSS.

Multiple trials were conducted by scientists at the residential houses of farmers having little or no land in the Kashmir valley.

“The first part of the technology to grow saffron inside under ambient and controlled conditions turned out to be successful,” Dr. Bashir Ahmad Ellahi, professor and the head of the ARSSSS, told VOA. “The second part of the experiment related to corm production inside under controlled conditions is in [its] final stage of testing at the research center.”

Saffron corms require cool temperatures for germination. Some farmers, who have adopted vertical farming, sow corms back into the ground, while the rest put the seeds inside plastic boxes and keep them in open air. 

In July, saffron corms are removed from the soil and placed on trays to bloom.

The crop is cultivated in mid-October. The red strains are supplied to different parts of the world after separating them from the yellow ones and flowers.

“If results of the second part of the experiment come in our favor, it means saffron can be grown indoors anywhere without taking corms back to fields,” Ellahi said, adding that the new technique will prove beneficial for “people who have less or no land in terms of production, as well as income.” 

 

New farmers 

 

Firdous Ahmad Bazaz, a tour operator, is passionate about vertical saffron farming.

“It is something that will help me to earn a good amount of money … when I am facing challenges in my business,” Bazaz said. “I can cultivate one kilogram of saffron in an empty room at my home.” 

Bazaz says people affiliated with the tourism industry face financial issues because of unfavorable conditions in the disputed region caused by political conflict.

“I will not have to worry about strikes or lockdowns after adopting indoor farming,” Bazaz told VOA. “I can easily manage both vertical farming as well as business.” 

Traditional cultivation advocates 

 

Irshad Ahmad Dar, another farmer, believes that cultivating saffron indoors is not a good idea.

He said that local government should also give attention to the traditional way of cultivating the crop.

“What is the fun of vertical farming if one has to sow corms back into the fields?” Dar questioned. “Entire process right from vegetation to cultivation should happen either inside or outside.” 

Dar told VOA that he is not opposing the SKUAST experiment but wants the government to pay attention to traditional ways of cultivating the crop.

“Saffron is our identity and heritage crop, and I, as a young person, want saffron cultivation to last for our future generations,” he said. “Whatever it takes to save saffron we should do it.”

Shahnawaz Ahmad Shah, agriculture officer of the Pulwama district and nodal officer for Saffron, said that internal farming has proven successful, but the result of the entire experiment is “yet to be declared.”

“We cannot recommend the use of vertical saffron for everyone until we get clearance from SKUAST,” he told VOA. “It is just a matter of a few months, and only then can we recommend people adopt the new technique.” 

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Pakistan Restores Power but Cause of Breakdown Remains Mystery

Pakistan announced Tuesday that electricity had been restored to much of the country of an estimated 220 million people—a day after a major power system failure caused a nationwide blackout, including in the capital, Islamabad. 

Energy Minister Khurram Dastgir said a sudden “voltage fluctuation in the north-south transmission line” was behind the outage, which began Monday morning, noting its cause was not yet known.

Dastgir told reporters in Islamabad that a high-level government investigation was underway to determine the reason for the “technical fault” that he said triggered the power failure and affected nearly the entire country.

“We know when it happened, how it happened, how much happened, but its source is yet to be determined,” he said. “We also suspect an external intervention such as hacking of our [power distribution] system, but we will leave it for the investigation to determine it.”

Pakistan has previously experienced major power breakdowns. They include nationwide daylong outages last October and in May of 2018. Authorities also blamed “technical glitches” at the time, though they did not make public results of subsequent investigations.

“We learned lessons from yesterday that we need to invest in the distribution system,” Dastgir said Tuesday. “The government plans to add more power distribution lines within the next 36 months,” he added.

Residents in major cities, including the southern port city of Karachi and the eastern city of Lahore, complained of an intermittent outage on Tuesday. Dastgir said the problem would be resolved over the next couple of days, emphasizing that coal-based and nuclear power plants take time before resuming normal operations.

Representatives of the textile mills association said the blackout inflicted estimated losses of $70 million on the industry, Pakistan’s largest exporter and crucial booster of foreign exchange reserves. 

Critics say Pakistan’s power network, like much of the national infrastructure, needs an upgrade, blaming rampant corruption and governance issues for persistent losses on the transmission and distribution side. 

“This is not just an issue of too much demand and too little supply. It goes much further than that. It goes into bigger issues involving finances and governance with the energy sector itself,” said Michael Kugelman, the South Asia Institute director at the Wilson Center in Washington.

Kugelman said while Pakistan does not charge all that much for the use of electricity, many people don’t pay their electricity bills. “The energy sector itself is simply very troubled. One of the biggest problems is debt and a lack of funding on the whole within the sector. The energy infrastructure is so weak and old, and there’s not enough money to maintain and repair it. They just have all kinds of wastage and losses.”

Pakistan has enough installed power generation capacity to meet domestic demand. China has invested in Pakistan’s power sector, building coal-fueled power plants in the country in recent years as part of its global Belt and Road initiative. 

But dwindling foreign exchange reserves and economic troubles have not allowed Islamabad to invest in improving its national transmission and distribution mechanisms.

Monday’s outage came as millions of Pakistanis in parts of the country already suffer partially scheduled daily power cuts, officially known as “load shedding.” The South Asian nation is facing a severe economic crisis forcing the government to implement energy conservation plans to reduce consumption. 

Lingering political turmoil and differences with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) over the review of an ongoing financial bailout package have prevented the global lender from releasing its latest tranche for cash-strapped Pakistan, fueling economic uncertainty.

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