Pakistani Taliban Kill 3 Police Officers in Northern Pakistan

The Pakistani Taliban on Saturday claimed responsibility for a gun ambush that killed three police officers in northern Pakistan, the second attack claimed by the group just days after it announced an end to a cease-fire with the government.

Police carrying out a patrol in Nowshera, a district of northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province that borders Afghanistan, came under fire on Saturday evening, a regional police deputy inspector, Mohammad Ali Gandapur, told Reuters.

He said three police officers were killed and the identity of the attackers was unknown.

The militant group Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement.

On Monday, the TTP announced an end to a months-long cease-fire, claiming a suicide attack in the southern Pakistani city of Quetta two days later that killed four people and wounded more than 30.

The TTP wants to overthrow Pakistan’s government and replace it with a governance system that subscribes to their own harsh interpretation of Islamic laws.

The Afghan Taliban have been facilitating peace talks between local militants and the government since late last year.

In recent months, the Pakistan army has conducted several operations against the militants in their strongholds in lawless districts along the Afghan border.

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Pakistan’s Top Diplomat in Afghanistan Survives Assassination Attempt

Pakistan’s chief diplomat in Afghanistan survived an assassination attempt Friday, but his security guard was critically injured.

Sources say Chargé d’affaires Ubaid-ur-Rehman Nizamani was on a routine afternoon walk on his residential lawn inside the sprawling embassy compound when unknown gunmen from a nearby building opened fire on him. The diplomat escaped unhurt, but his security guard was hit in the chest by three bullets, sources added.

A foreign ministry statement in Islamabad condemned what it called an attempted assassination of Nizamani. It demanded the Taliban government in Kabul immediately investigate the shooting and bring the culprits to justice. Pakistan also called on local authorities to take urgent measures to ensure the safety and security of its diplomatic mission, personnel and citizens in Afghanistan.

Taliban Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi said in a statement that his government strongly condemns “the failed firing attack” at the Pakistan embassy and that it will not allow “any malicious actors” to pose a threat to the security of diplomatic missions in the Afghan capital.

“Our security [agencies] will conduct a serious investigation, identify perpetrators and bring them to justice,” Balkhi said.

A police spokesman in Kabul said one suspect had been arrested and two light weapons seized after security forces swept a nearby building “and prevented the continuation of gunfire.”

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

Pakistan called the Afghan chargé d’affaires to the foreign ministry late on Friday to convey its “deep concern and anguish” over the attack. It was underscored that “perpetrators of this attack must be apprehended and brought to justice urgently,” the statement said.

It urged Taliban authorities to boost security of diplomatic premises, officers and staff working in Kabul as well other diplomatic facilities in Afghanistan.

Pakistan and the world at large does not formally recognize Afghanistan’s Taliban government. Pakistan — along with China, Russia, Turkey, Qatar and several other countries — has, however, kept its embassy in Kabul open.

Friday’s attack comes just days after Pakistan’s deputy Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar visited the Afghan capital for bilateral meetings with Taliban leaders.

Last month a gunman disguised as a Taliban guard shot dead a Pakistani security officer at the southwestern Chaman border crossing between the two countries. The incident prompted Pakistan to temporarily suspend all movement across the busy crossing.

A suicide bombing near the entrance of Russian embassy in Kabul in September killed six people, including two Russian staff. The latest attack targeting a foreign diplomatic mission in the capital is likely to fuel security concerns for the diplomatic community in Kabul.

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Global Media Watchdog Condemns Taliban Ban on VOA, RFE/RL Broadcasts

The Committee to Protect Journalists has condemned the Afghan Taliban’s decision to ban FM transmissions of two U.S.-funded news media and urged an immediate resumption of their broadcasts.

The Islamist Taliban government’s ban went into effect December 1. A day earlier, the Taliban’s Ministry of Information and Culture said it had received complaints about programming content but shared no specifics.

In a statement, the press freedom watchdog called on the Taliban to “cease their intensifying crackdown” on media in Afghanistan.

“This latest crackdown on media clearly shows the Taliban is going back on their word about guaranteeing press freedom in Afghanistan,” said Beh Lih Yi, CPJ Asia program director.

Despite ban, broadcasters still reach listeners

The ban on FM and medium-wave transmissions in the country came months after the Taliban stopped TV broadcasts by Voice of America, also known as VOA. The broadcasters still have shortwave and medium-wave transmissions from outside the country reaching Afghan listeners, as well as digital and satellite operations, but the in-country FM transmissions were considered critical for reaching large, local audiences.

Abdul Qahar Balkhi, a spokesperson for the Taliban foreign ministry, explained in written comments to VOA why the group is banning the broadcasters.

“VOA and Azadi Radio failed to adhere to these laws, were found as repeat offenders, failed to show professionalism and were therefore shut down,” Balkhi wrote.

VOA and RFE/RL routinely cover issues such as human rights, girls’ education, press freedom, economic troubles, and the deep humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan. They present a variety of views, including those critical of the Taliban.

In a written statement, VOA’s Afghan Service Chief Hasib Alikozai rejected the allegations about the programming and said the agency had not received any complaints about the content.

“These are made-up reasons for taking our stations off the air. The truth is that we were effective in our reporting of issues, which local media outlets could not cover because of their fears of retribution by the Taliban,” Alikozai said.

The Biden administration has also condemned the Taliban’s decision. In an interview with VOA, John Kirby, the National Security Council coordinator for strategic communication, said the Taliban’s suppression of free media will hinder its goal of seeking legitimacy.

“We’re going to continue to stand up … for freedom of the press and for the right of citizens around the world to be able to access press and news information,” Kirby said.

It has been almost 16 months since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan, and no country has recognized their government.

U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan Thomas West, who is traveling in Asia to discuss humanitarian support for the country, said Afghans need access to independent media.

VOA has said it will continue programming for Afghan audiences.

“Removing VOA from the domestic airwaves will not silence us. It will only increase the importance of serving the captive audience inside Afghanistan,” wrote Acting Director Yolanda Lopez.

Leadership of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty — also known as RFE/RL — also rejected the Taliban’s criticism and said the broadcaster will not change its editorial line to stay on air.

“We know from experience that our audiences make great efforts to find us. The truth cannot be completely suppressed,” said RFE/RL President and CEO Jamie Fly.

In March, the Taliban stopped VOA’s Ashna TV news shows, which had been broadcast on Afghan National Television, Tolo, Tolo News and Lamar for a decade, VOA Pashto reported.

Many VOA programs are anchored by women. The Taliban have banned women from appearing on television without covering their faces.

Since the Taliban reclaimed power in August 2021, dozens of private television channels, radio stations and print media have ceased operation because of economic hardships and Taliban restrictions.

According to the press advocacy group Reporters Without Borders (RSF), 219 video, audio and print shops have closed in Afghanistan since the reestablishment of Taliban rule. Before then, 547 media outlets operated in the country, RSF said.

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Attack Near Ex-Afghan PM Hekmatyar’s Office Injures Two, His Party Says

Two people were injured Friday in an attack in Kabul near the office of the Hezb-e-Islami party associated with former Afghan prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, but all the senior leaders were safe, the party said in a statement.

Multiple attackers were killed and several guards injured in the incident, according to three Hezb-e-Islami sources and one source with the ruling Taliban.

Kabul police and the interior ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. It was not immediately clear who was behind the attack.

The incident took place on the same day as Pakistan Prime Minister condemned what he said was an assassination attempt on the country’s Head of Mission in Kabul. Taliban authorities did not immediately respond to request for comment.

The attack on the Hezb-e-Islami party office occurred near a mosque where senior party leaders were present, but all – including Hekmatyar – were unscathed, according to the party statement and his grandson, Obaidullah Baheer.

“All respected authorities, including the respected leader, are safe and sound … two senior guards from the leader’s support unit were superficially injured and no one else was injured,” the statement said.

One Taliban and one party source said a vehicle belonging to the attackers and packed with explosives had detonated near the office. Firing took place and two attackers were killed while trying to enter the mosque, they said.

Several bombing and shooting attacks have taken place in Afghanistan in recent months, some of which have been claimed by Islamic State militants. A blast at a madrassa on Wednesday in northern Afghanistan killed at least 15 people.

The hardline Islamist Taliban, which seized power after U.S.-led foreign forces withdrew in August 2021, have said they are focused on securing the country.

Hekmatyar founded Hezb-e-Islami in the mid-1970s as one of the main mujahideen groups fighting the 1980s Soviet invasion of Afghanistan from its base in Pakistan. He held the office of prime minister twice during the 1990s.

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India Cannot Ditch Coal Despite Ramping Up Green Energy

India is increasing the pace of green energy projects to cut carbon emissions, but coal use has also been rising this year. As Anjana Pasricha reports from New Delhi, that could set back efforts to reach India’s target net zero carbon emissions by 2070 seen as critical to deal with global climate change.

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Despite Ramping Up Green Energy, India Cannot Ditch Coal

India is rapidly ramping up green energy projects in its bid to reduce carbon emissions but the dependence on coal to power its fast-growing economy also increased this year.

In the western Gujarat state, Modhera became India’s first village to be powered completely by solar energy in October. The $10 million project involved setting up rooftop panels on residential and government buildings, giving hundreds of low income residents access to affordable power.

In Rajasthan state in the country’s northwest, 10 million gleaming solar panels sprawl over a 5,700-hectare desert site. The construction of the Badhla solar park, now the world’s largest, has been done in stages since 2015 and it now generates enough electricity to power over 1 million homes.

As billions of dollars are invested in both large and small projects of this kind, India hopes to expand its renewable energy sector into one of the world’s largest. Experts, though, say they may not be enough to help meet the country’s goal of generating half its energy through nonfossil fuels by 2030.

“While we are on the right direction, we are, on an annual basis, adding more and more nonfossil fuel capacity, but it’s still falling short of the 30 gigawatt of annual capacity addition that is required,” Vibhuti Garg, director for South Asia at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, a U.S. energy analysis organization, said.

“So definitely there is space to do much more than what we are doing currently,” she said.

Even as green energy gets a boost, India also increased coal production this year to meet the galloping demand of an economy that has rebounded after the pandemic. This summer, as a searing heat wave led to power outages, the government gave coal mines the green light to boost production. Last month, it announced that it would auction about 140 new coal mines to the private sector.

Officials have said there will be no transition away from coal in the foreseeable future as demand for coal had not yet peaked in the country. In November, Coal and Mines Minister Pralhad Joshi told a parliamentary panel that, “For India, coal, being an affordable source of energy, holds prime importance for meeting its energy needs being fueled by rising economy.”

The reason is that India’s energy needs are expected to grow more than anywhere in the world over the next two decades – the country is growing at the fastest pace among major economies propelling more and more of its 1.4 billion people into the middle class.

Climate campaigners agree that India faces a dilemma in balancing its goals for development with its pledges to reach net zero emissions by 2070. Coal accounts for about 70% of India’s power generation.

 “We need to look at how as the economy is bouncing back, demand for power has been growing,” according to Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at Climate Action Network International, which backs action to fight climate change.

“We have also seen that this year’s incidence of heat wave added to the demand for more electricity because people started using air coolers and air conditioners much more. And for India to develop and provide more jobs, there is a pressure to increase coal,” he said.

As in several other countries, the disruption in world energy markets this year also made it harder for India to wean itself off coal.

“Because of the Russia-Ukraine war or because of the COVID-19 pandemic, from the energy security perspective, all countries including India have started looking inwards and are starting to exploiting more and more of their domestic resources,” according to Garg. “And India is endowed with domestic coal, so definitely in the last few months, there has been an increasing emphasis on use of coal.”

Experts like Garg however are optimistic that older plants that emit more greenhouse gas will be phased out and replaced by more efficient ones based on newer technology thus making it possible to hold down carbon emissions.

India is the world’s second-largest coal producer behind China, according to the International Energy Agency.

At the recent climate summit in Egypt, India, the world’s third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, said it is committed to pursuing low-carbon strategies for development. But it also pushed for more finance and technology from developed countries to enable the transition.

Experts point out that funding the country’s switch to green energy is expensive and failure to meet commitments made by rich countries of providing $100 billion a year to developing ones is a setback.

“The cost has to come down if we need to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels. Without adequate support from the international community on finance, it is going to be extremely difficult because then, practically speaking, India is on its own to make that transition,” Singh said.

Experts say because of its size, the pace at which India eliminates coal from its energy mix will be of paramount importance in limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius to tackle global climate change.

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Health Care Access Difficult for HIV Patients in Flood-Ravaged Areas of Pakistan

In the highly conservative country of Pakistan, AIDS patients often face discrimination that keeps them from disclosing their diagnosis. Hundreds of HIV cases reported in Sindh Province in 2019 included children. That region was recently devastated by floods, making access to health care for HIV patients even more difficult. VOA’s Sidra Dar reports from Sindh Province, in this report narrated by Asadullah Khalid.
Camera: Muhammad Khalil

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Messi Fans from Asia Cheer on Argentina at World Cup

On their way to Argentina’s decisive game against Poland, Mohit Daga and Aayush Verma approached the stadium carrying a massive painting of their heroes Lionel Messi and Diego Maradona with the World Cup trophy.

Daga had spent 17 days painting it. It weighed 5 kilograms (11 pounds). An offering. Anything for Messi, whom he described as a “god.”

“He is the epitome of everything. He is the source of inspiration and happiness,” said Daga, who is from Kolkata, India. “He brings happiness to our life.”

Argentina is finding a legion of passionate superfans from India, Bangladesh and other Asian countries at the World Cup in Qatar.

Thousands have traveled to the Gulf nation specifically to see Messi and his team with their own eyes, while many others are among migrant workers that make up about 90% of the emirate’s population of 3 million.

Other fans cheered from afar. In Indonesia, social media showed hundreds of people celebrating Argentina’s team’s 2-0 win over Poland after watching the game on large screens. They paraded on motorbikes waving flags after Argentina secured progress to the knockout stages. A newsreader wore an Argentina shirt during a broadcast.

Smitha Issac, originally from India, now living in Qatar, was attending the game with her family, including two sons who were “too excited” to see Messi.

“He is something like Messiah,” Isaac said. “We are expecting that he will just make something like magic today.”

Outside Stadium 974 shortly before kickoff on Wednesday, Argentina fans were still scrambling for any spare tickets to see the game. Demand far outstripped supply for the 44,000-capacity stadium.

Mohammed Haque from Bangladesh, now living in Australia, was one of the lucky ticket holders. He waved a large Argentina flag as he walked toward the flood-lit stadium made of shipping containers, approaching it like a holy shrine.

“It’s unbelievable,” Haque said of seeing Messi for the first time.

“I’ve actually been preparing for the last two or three weeks for this. I had a sleepless night last night.”

Argentina has had a big following in Bangladesh since the days of Maradona, one of the greatest to play the game, and an icon to fans around the world.

“Diego Maradona, he was exceptional. And from then I just loved this country and especially the soccer every time,” Haque said. “Then later, [Gabriel] Batistuta, [Hernan] Crespo, every Argentine player, and now Messi is the legend.”

Bangladesh, India and Pakistan — where cricket is king — have never played a World Cup. So, when the tournament comes along, many soccer fans typically root for Argentina or Brazil, soccer powerhouses admired for their attacking style of play and a long line of international stars, including Messi, Maradona and Pele.

Fans who had traveled from Argentina to support their team in Qatar were delighted with the support from non-Argentines.

“We love to see other countries showing their love for Messi and Maradona,” said Mauricio Neraj from Mendoza, Argentina. He posed for pictures next to the painting of Messi and Maradona by Daga outside the stadium.

Argentina’s soccer federation praised the support from Bangladeshis on social media on Thursday.

“Thank you for supporting our team. You are as crazy as we are!” the federation said in a Twitter post with photos showing Bangladeshi fans wearing Argentina’s sky blue and white jersey.

Some of the South Asian fans in Qatar said they were deeply hurt by speculation on social media and in some Western media before the tournament that they were hired actors, paid by Qatar to fill the stadiums. The World Cup organizing committee rejected the reports as false.

“It is coming from the bottom of our hearts. It is not coming from any outside forcing or anything like that,” said Binoy John, and Indian worker in Qatar who has been an Argentina fan since childhood when he saw Maradona lead Argentina to victory in the 1986 World Cup. “All the fans are true fans. There is nothing like fake fans out here.”

Argentina has a following among Arab soccer fans, too. Messi devotion brought Ahmed Qassim Nasher from Yemen to see his favorite player as Argentina advanced.

“Football is a festival, joy, celebrations. It connects people from different nationalities, different languages, and different ethnicities,” Nasher said. “You will find Arabs and non-Arabs coming to cheer for Messi. It’s common sense that he will have the best audience and fans, because he is the best player throughout history.”

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Pakistan Questions Anti-Terror Pledges by Afghanistan’s Taliban

Pakistan warned Thursday that cross-border terrorism emanating from Afghanistan “is both alarming and dangerous” for regional peace, calling on the neighboring country’s ruling Taliban to honor their anti-terror pledges.

Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah issued the warning amid a new wave of deadly terrorist attacks in Pakistan that has claimed the lives of hundreds of people, mostly security forces.

Outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), known as the Pakistani Taliban, has claimed credit for plotting much of the violence. Leaders and commanders of the group, an offshoot and ally of the Afghan Taliban, have largely taken refuge in Afghanistan.

“If the TTP is claiming responsibility for terrorist activities in Pakistan, it should be a matter of serious concern for the government of Afghanistan because their soil is being used for terrorism,” Sanaullah told reporters in Islamabad.

“[The Taliban] have given assurances to the world that they would not allow the use of Afghanistan’s soil by terrorist outfits, and they should deliver on their pledges.”

The Afghan Taliban deny they allow TTP or any other group to use Afghan territory for plotting cross-border terrorist attacks, promising they will try for treason anyone found guilty of such crimes.

Suicide bombing

Sanaullah spoke a day after TTP claimed credit for a suicide bombing of a truck transporting policeman on their way to protect medical workers administering polio vaccines in southwestern Baluchistan province.

The blast in the provincial capital, Quetta, killed at least four people and wounded more than two dozen, mostly policemen.

TTP is listed as a global terrorist organization by the United States and the United Nations. It has carried out hundreds of suicide attacks and other terrorist strikes in Pakistan, killing tens of thousands of people since 2007 when the group emerged in volatile districts along the Afghan border.

Pakistan sustained years of counterterrorism military operations, which forced TTP members to flee to Afghanistan and establish sanctuaries there. But the return to power in Kabul of the Taliban in August 2021 has emboldened TTP members, and they enjoy greater operational freedom on the other side of the border, Pakistani officials maintain.

Sanaullah noted up to 7,000 combatants linked to the Pakistani Taliban and their families are currently sheltering on Afghan soil, saying the government is ready to talk with them to facilitate their repatriation if they agree to surrender and hand over their weapons in compliance with Pakistani laws.

TTP announces end to unilateral “cease-fire”

On Wednesday, the TTP said it was ending a unilateral “cease-fire” with the government and resuming attacks across Pakistan in retaliation for the government’s military operations against the group.

Pakistani officials rejected the claims as “lame excuses” and said the operations were launched to prevent TTP fighters from regrouping or reorganizing in the country.

The militant truce stemmed from several rounds of talks the Taliban government in Afghanistan recently brokered and hosted between Pakistani and TTP representatives.

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Afghans Show Mixed Feelings About US More Than a Year After Withdrawal

Despite its chaotic military and diplomatic withdrawal from Afghanistan over a year ago, U.S. global leadership approval has seen a slight uptick among some Afghans, a new survey conducted inside the country says.

Approval of U.S. leadership among all Afghans is measured at 18%, slightly more than the 14% measured last year, while U.S. popularity is sharply different among different ethnic groups in Afghanistan.

“The U.S. remains popular among Afghanistan’s Hazara ethnic community; 53% are still supportive of U.S. leadership,” Gallup said in a statement about its latest survey in the country.

The Shia Hazaras are an ethnic and religious minority in Afghanistan making up 10 to 12% of the country’s estimated 36 million people.

Gallup says its surveyors interviewed 1,000 men and women from 21 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces this year.

Among Pashtuns, Afghanistan’s largest ethnic group, the U.S. remains widely unpopular with only an 8% approval rate, while among Tajiks, the second largest ethnic group, it’s reported at 23%.

Most Taliban leaders are Pashtuns who fought against the United States in Afghanistan from 2002 until U.S. and Taliban representatives signed a peace agreement in February 2020.

Despite its complex history of engagement in Afghanistan, the U.S. remains more popular in the South Asian country than China and Russia, whose leadership approval rates are equally ranked at 14% in the survey.

The U.S. spent about $2 trillion on the Afghan war for over two decades. More than 150,000 people lost their lives in the war, including at least 2,400 U.S. military personnel.

A majority of Americans, 69%, said the U.S. mostly failed in achieving its goals in Afghanistan, according to an August 2022 Pew survey.

Loss of hope

The drastic changes Afghanistan has seen over the last year seem to have disappointed an overwhelming majority of ordinary Afghans, according to the Gallup survey.

Nearly all Afghans, 98%, rated their living conditions as “suffering” under the new regime and only 11% said they have hopes for better opportunities for the next generation.

Afghans are also increasingly concerned about a sharp deterioration in women’s rights.

“A record-low 22% of Afghans say women in their country are treated with respect and dignity — down from the previous low of 31% in 2021,” reads a Gallup statement.

“The one positive we did see was in relation to the safety that Afghans feel within their communities. The percentage of Afghans who feel safe walking alone at night in their communities increased from 22% to 52%,” said Julie Ray, a Gallup analyst.

The Taliban’s return to power has crippled the Afghan economy, pushing 90% of the population into poverty, the United Nations has reported.

“Taliban’s rules of the 90s and currently can be encapsulated in one word: suffering,” Malaiz Daud, senior research fellow with the European Foundation for South Asian studies, told VOA.

“They lack the management, organizational and resource mobilization skills to run a polity designed to look after an entire country.”

Taliban officials, however, redirect all criticisms of economic paralysis to the West saying financial sanctions, assets freeze and a cessation of development assistance have pushed the country to the ongoing humanitarian crisis.

Editor’s note: An earlier version of this article incorrectly attributed a quote from Gallup analyst Julie Ray.

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India Dismisses Chinese Objections to India-US Military Drills Near Border

India has dismissed Beijing’s objections to U.S.-India military exercises being held close to India’s disputed border with China.

The drills between Indian and U.S. soldiers began in mid-November and are due to conclude Friday. Part of annual exercises held by the two sides, this year’s maneuvers are taking place in the Himalayan mountains in Auli in Uttarakhand state, about 100 kilometers from the border area, known as the Line of Actual Control.   

China said on Wednesday that the joint exercises “violated the spirit of relevant agreements” between Beijing and New Delhi. “It does not serve the mutual trust between China and India. China has expressed concerns to the Indian side over the military exercise,” foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told a media briefing in Beijing. 

Responding to China’s comments, Indian foreign ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi said Thursday that “India exercises with whomsoever it chooses to, and it does not give a veto to third countries on this issue.” 

Bagchi said the exercises had nothing to do with the agreements China had referred to. “But since these were raised, the Chinese side needs to reflect upon and think upon its own breach of these agreements,” according to Bagchi.  

Tensions between India and China have escalated since a bloody border clash in 2020 killed 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers in the Ladakh area. As a result, both sides continue to deploy tens of thousands of soldiers backed by artillery, tanks and fighter jets along the disputed border and are rapidly building infrastructure in the Himalayan mountains.   

Following several rounds of talks between the military commanders of the two countries, soldiers have pulled back from some so-called “friction points” along the border where they were posted close to each other, but heavy deployments continue at other points that are of strategic significance to both sides.  

The U.S. Department of Defense said in a report this week that China “warned” U.S. officials not to interfere in its relations with India following the border skirmishes. “The PRC (People’s Republic of China) seeks to prevent border tensions from causing India to partner more closely with the United States,” stated the report on “Military and Security Developments involving China” that was submitted to U.S. lawmakers.  

This year’s drills in Auli were the 18th edition of joint exercises known as “Yudh Abhyas” or “War Practice” that are held alternately in the U.S. and India with the aim of exchanging best practices, tactics and techniques. Last year’s exercises were held in Alaska.  

Before the drills commenced, India’s Ministry of Defense said the exercises will focus on surveillance, mountain-warfare skills, casualty evacuation and combat medical aid in adverse terrain and climatic conditions.   

The exercises are part of deepening military cooperation between New Delhi and Washington, driven by mutual concerns over Beijing’s growing assertiveness. India is part of the Quad alliance, with the U.S, Australia and Japan, that aims to counter Beijing’s growing influence in the Indo-Pacific.   

India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyan Jaishankar, has reiterated on several forums that New Delhi’s relationship with Beijing cannot be normal without peace in the border areas.

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Mixed Feelings About US in Afghanistan More Than a Year After Withdrawal

Despite its chaotic military and diplomatic withdrawal from Afghanistan over a year ago, U.S. global leadership approval has seen a slight uptick among some Afghans, a new survey conducted inside the country says. 

Approval of U.S. leadership among all Afghans is measured at 18%, slightly more than the 14% measured last year, while U.S. popularity is sharply different among different ethnic groups in Afghanistan. 

“The U.S. remains popular among Afghanistan’s Hazara ethnic community; 53% are still supportive of U.S. leadership,” Gallup said in a statement about its latest survey in the country. 

The Shia Hazaras are an ethnic and religious minority in Afghanistan making up 10 to 12% of the country’s estimated 36 million people. 

Gallup says its surveyors interviewed 1,000 men and women from 21 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces this year.  

Among Pashtuns, Afghanistan’s largest ethnic group, the U.S. remains widely unpopular with only an 8% approval rate, while among Tajiks, the second largest ethnic group, it’s reported at 23% 

Most Taliban leaders are Pashtuns who fought against the United States in Afghanistan from 2002 until U.S. and Taliban representatives signed a peace agreement in February 2020. 

Despite its complex history of engagement in Afghanistan, the U.S. remains more popular in the South Asian country than China and Russia, whose leadership approval rates are equally ranked at 14% in the survey. 

The U.S. spent about $2 trillion on the Afghan war for over two decades. More than 150,000 people lost their lives in the war, including at least 2,400 U.S. military personnel. 

A majority of Americans, 69%, said the U.S. mostly failed in achieving its goals in Afghanistan, according to an August 2022 Pew survey. 

Loss of hope

The drastic changes Afghanistan has seen over the last year seem to have disappointed an overwhelming majority of ordinary Afghans, according to the Gallup survey. 

Nearly all Afghans, 98%, rated their living conditions as “suffering” under the new regime and only 11% said they have hopes for better opportunities for the next generation. 

Afghans are also increasingly concerned about a sharp deterioration in women’s rights. 

“A record-low 22% of Afghans say women in their country are treated with respect and dignity — down from the previous low of 31% in 2021,” reads a Gallup statement. 

“The one positive we did see was in relation to the safety that Afghans feel within their communities. The percentage of Afghans who feel safe walking alone at night in their communities increased from 22% to 52%,” said Khorshied Nusratty, a Gallup spokeswoman. 

The Taliban’s return to power has crippled the Afghan economy, pushing 90% of the population into poverty, the United Nations has reported. 

“Taliban’s rules of the 90s and currently can be encapsulated in one word: suffering,” Malaiz Daud, senior research fellow with the European Foundation for South Asian studies, told VOA. 

“They lack the management, organizational and resource mobilization skills to run a polity designed to look after an entire country.” 

Taliban officials, however, redirect all criticisms of economic paralysis to the West saying financial sanctions, assets freeze and a cessation of development assistance have pushed the country to the ongoing humanitarian crisis. 

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Taliban Defend Ban on VOA, RFE/RL Broadcasts in Afghanistan

The Islamist Taliban government has defended banning FM radio broadcasts from two U.S.-funded news media, including the Voice of America, in Afghanistan, alleging they were offending local laws.

The ban on VOA and Azadi Radio, an Afghan extension of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, or RFE/RL, went into effect Thursday, a day after the Taliban’s ministry of information and culture said it had received complaints about programing content but shared no specifics.

It is unclear whether the ban will apply to other international broadcasters that have used the same system for FM broadcasts in Afghanistan.

“Afghanistan has press laws and any network found repeatedly contravening these laws will have their privilege of reporting from and broadcasting within Afghanistan taken away,” Abdul Qahar Balkhi, the Taliban foreign ministry spokesman, said in his written comments to VOA.

“VOA and Azadi Radio failed to adhere to these laws, were found as repeat offenders, failed to show professionalism and were therefore shut down,” Balkhi asserted.

The two U.S. government-funded news organizations operate with journalistic independence and aim to provide comprehensive, balanced coverage.

VOA’s Afghan services broadcast 12 hours a day on 15 FM channels and two medium wave (MW) channels, with programming split between Pashto and Dari, reaching millions of listeners across improvised Afghanistan, where radio remains a primary source of information.

The Taliban retook control of Afghanistan in August 2021, just days before American and NATO troops concluded their withdrawal from the country after 20 years of war with the then-insurgent Islamist group.

The Taliban have since implemented their harsh interpretation of Islamic law to govern the conflict-ridding country, restricting rights and freedoms.

The restrictions and financial hardships have forced dozens of private television channels, radio stations and print media reportedly to cease operation in Afghanistan, with thousands of journalists losing jobs. Hundreds of Afghan media personnel also have fled the country, fearing Taliban persecution.

France-based global media advocacy group Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, has reported that the country has lost 40% of its media outlets and 60% of its journalists since the Taliban takeover.

Dari and Pashto radio programs of VOA started broadcasting to Afghanistan in the1980s when the South Asian nation was being occupied by Soviet forces.

The local language broadcasts are widely respected as credible and reliable.

VOA also reaches a large Afghan audience via digital media. In March the Taliban stopped VOA’s Ashna TV news shows, which had been broadcast on Afghan National Television, Tolo News and Lamar for a decade, VOA Pashto reported.

Amnesty International said Thursday on Twitter that the Taliban’s seizure of power in Afghanistan “has resulted in sweeping changes to the lives of all Afghans, but even more for women and girls. They face dire restrictions on their rights in their daily lives.”

Since taking over the country, the Taliban have barred women from undergoing long road trips without a male relative, have ordered women to cover their faces in public and have prevented teenage girls from returning to secondary schools.

Akmal Dawi contributed to this report.

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Kashmir Fruit Growers Demand Stiffer Controls on Iranian Apple Imports

Kashmiri apple growers are demanding that the Indian government take strong action to stop the alleged illicit movement of Iranian apples through Afghanistan to markets in India, saying the practice is depressing prices and undermining a $150 million (12 billion Indian rupees) in annual regional industry.

The growers say there is evidence that the Iranian apples are being shipped through Afghanistan so they can be imported into India duty free under the terms of the eight-country South Asian Free Trade Area. Iran is not a party to the agreement.

“We don’t want a ban on Iranian apples. Rather we want that they should be imported to India through legal means by paying the import duty. After paying proper taxes, it will no longer be cheaper any more in Indian market,” said Mir Mohammad Amin, a grower and trader from South Kashmir’s Shopian district.

Kashmir’s cool climate makes it a favored region for growing fruit and nuts, some 2.6 million tons of which are shipped annually to more than 150 markets across India as well as overseas. The apple industry alone is an important source of livelihood for 3.5 million people in Indian-administered Kashmir.

But a large share of this year’s bumper crop is sitting unsold in cold storage sites, the result of a combination of unusual transport problems and, the Kashmiri growers say, unfair competition from Iran.

“We still have lot of apple produce in our godowns and [climate controlled] stores that will get a hit because of the import of Iranian apples to various coastal states of India,” said Bashir Ahmad Bashir, chairman of the Kashmir Valley Fruit Growers/Dealers Union.

He said the price of a box of high-quality apples this year is between $6 and $7.50 (INR 500-600), down from between $11 to $13.50 (INR 900-1,100) a year ago.

Digvijay Gupta, joint director of the Jammu and Kashmir Horticulture, Planning and Marketing Department, suggested the growers are overstating the problem. He cited statistics showing just 40,000 metric tons of Iranian apples are reaching Indian markets, compared to 300,000 metric tons of apples from Kashmir.

But the Kashmiri apple growers believe the volume of Iranian apples has grown significantly in recent years and is considerably larger than the official figures indicate.

They also note that their concerns are shared by apple growers in the neighboring Indian states of Himachal and Uttarakhand. At a meeting of the Apple Farmers Federation of India this week, growers from all three states agreed to organize a protest in New Delhi on March 6. 

The Kashmiri apple growers’ problems have been compounded this year by maintenance and repair work on the main highway connecting the Kashmir Valley with central India during September and October, critical months for shipping their produce to market.

Fayaz Ahmad Malik, president of the fruit growers and dealers association, Fruit Mandi Sopore, said the roadwork had caused lengthy delays, allowing apples and other perishable fruit to decay on the trucks. He estimated the loss to growers at about $18.5 million (INR 1.5 billion).

Mehbooba Mufti, who served as chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir until 2018, joined a group of fruit farmers protesting the road closure in September.

“You have turned Kashmir into an open jail, pulverized our economy,” she said in remarks aimed at the federal government. “I warn the administration if they don’t immediately open the roads for trucks, I along with our workers will sit in a protest.”

In response to the public outcry, the traffic police insisted that they had not held up any trucks for longer than two days and threatened to arrest anyone circulating false rumors.

“Over 10,000 [heavy motor vehicles], including 8,820 fruit-laden trucks, released through Navyug and Jawahar tunnels during the past 24 hours,” Jammu and Kashmir’s Information Department tweeted.

 

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Taliban Bans VOA, RFE/RL Radio in Afghanistan

Taliban authorities have announced a ban on VOA and RFE/RL radio broadcasts on FM stations in Afghanistan, citing complaints they have received about programming content. 

The ban will be enforced on December 1, according to a directive issued by the Taliban’s ministry of information and culture. 

Taliban spokespeople have not provided further details about the alleged complaints they say they have received about the U.S.-funded news programs. 

It is also unclear whether the ban will apply to other international broadcasters that have used the same system for FM broadcasts in Afghanistan. 

Earlier this year, the Taliban also banned VOA Dari and Pashto language television shows on the private Tolo News channel in Afghanistan. 

VOA Dari and Pashto radio programs, first started in the 1980s, reach millions of listeners across Afghanistan and are widely respected as credible and reliable. 

Since seizing power last year, the Taliban have imposed a series of restrictions on media and journalists in Afghanistan including mandatory facemasks for women. 

Free press groups have accused the Taliban of imposing widespread censorship on media, harassing journalists and denying work rights for female media personnel. 

Dozens of private television channels, radio stations and print media have reportedly ceased operations in Afghanistan over the past year largely due to economic hardships and Taliban restrictions. Hundreds of Afghan media personnel have also fled the country fearing Taliban persecution. 

This is a developing story and more details will be added as they become available.

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Resetting Ties: Pakistan-US Relations After Afghan War

After playing an outsized role during the nearly two-decade-long U.S.-led war in Afghanistan, Pakistan was not included in the Biden administration’s national security strategy this year. Sarah Zaman looks at how U.S.-Pakistan ties evolved in 2022 and the impact of U.S-China competition on stability in South Asia.

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Bombing Kills 15 Students at Religious School in Northern Afghanistan

Taliban authorities in Afghanistan said Wednesday that at least 15 students were killed and 27 others wounded when a bomb ripped through a religious school, or madras, in northern Samangan province.

Imdadullah Mahajer, the head of provincial information and culture directorate, confirmed the casualties to VOA by phone. He did not share further details nor did he say if a planted bomb or a suicide attack caused the blast. 

Abdul Nafi Takoor, an Interior Ministry spokesman in Kabul, said the bombing in the provincial capital, Aybak, occurred while students were holding afternoon prayers. Takoor said Taliban security and intelligence forces had reached the site to investigate and bring the perpetrators to justice.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the deadly bombing, although suspicions fell on Islamic State Khorasan Province or ISIS-K, the Afghan branch of the Islamic State militant group.

ISIS-K has stepped up attacks since August 2021, when the Taliban took over the conflict-ridden country and the United States, along with NATO allies, withdrew troops from Afghanistan after nearly 20 years of war with the then-insurgent Taliban.

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Suicide Blast Hits Pakistan Police Truck on Way to Protect Polio Workers

A suicide bombing of a police truck in southwestern Pakistan early Wednesday killed at least four people and injured 24 others, mostly police officers. 

 

The outlawed Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack in Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province. 

 

Ghulam Azfer Mehser, a top provincial police officer, told reporters a suicide bomber rammed his auto-ricksha into a truck transporting policemen on their way to protect medical workers administering polio vaccines.  

 

The ensuing powerful blast toppled the truck into a roadside ravine and damaged two nearby vehicles, injuring four civilians, the officer said. “Remains of a suicide bomber have been found near the crime scene,” Mehser added. 

 

The bombing happened two days after the TTP announced it was resuming nationwide attacks in retaliation for military operations against its fighters, dumping a shaky unilateral truce with the Pakistan government.  

 

The TTP, listed as a global terrorist group by the United States and the United Nations, is an offshoot and ally of Afghanistan’s ruling Islamist Taliban. The group’s leadership has long taken refuge in the conflict-ridden neighboring country and directs cross-border attacks from there, according to Pakistani officials.  

 

Wednesday’s attack in Quetta came amid an ongoing nationwide anti-polio drive to inoculate children under five years of age against the crippling disease in dozens of high-risk districts, including Baluchistan. The five-day campaign was rolled out on Monday. 

 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, while condemning the attack on the police vehicle, said “evil elements” would never succeed in harming the anti-polio campaign in Pakistan. 

 

The South Asian nation of about 220 million people has experienced a resurgence in wild poliovirus cases, particularly in northwestern districts near the Afghan border, paralyzing 20 children so far this year. That compares to just one polio case reported in 2021. 

Pakistan has repeatedly come close to eradicating polio but deadly militant attacks on vaccinators in recent years and long-running propaganda in conservative rural parts of the country that the vaccines cause sterility has setback the mission.  

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Pakistan’s Former Spymaster Takes Command of Powerful Military

Pakistan’s new military chief, General Asim Munir, took command Tuesday of the country’s nuclear-equipped armed forces amid renewed threats of terrorism and growing calls for him to take the powerful institution out of politics.

The former head of the country’s main spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), assumed his three-year stint as army chief at a nationally televised ceremony in the city of Rawalpindi, where the military is headquartered.

Munir received the symbolic baton of command from his predecessor, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, who retired after an extended six-year term marred by controversy.

The military has played an outsized role in the governance of the South Asian nation of about 220 million people. It has orchestrated the removal of elected governments in collusion with political allies and directly ruled Pakistan for about half of its 75-year history.

Munir is the 17th army chief of the country since it won independence from Britain in 1947, compared to about 30 prime ministers during the same period.

Last week, Bajwa admitted in a televised speech that the military had been indulging in “unconstitutional” interference in national politics for 70 years, exposing the institution to severe public criticism from time to time.

The 62-year-old outgoing general went on to assure the Pakistani nation that early last year, the military, under his leadership decided after internal deliberations, it would “never again interfere in any political matter in future.”

Analysts swiftly dismissed the claims and remain skeptical about whether Munir can deliver on pledges by his predecessor or the chances of Pakistan’s military becoming an apolitical institution.

Bajwa’s claims stemmed from sustained widespread criticism of the military under his leadership. Former prime minister Imran Khan has accused him of colluding with the United States and opposition parties to plot Khan’s removal from office in April of this year.

The ousted cricket-star-turned politician has not produced any evidence. The military has denied any involvement in Khan’s ouster and so did Washington.

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party celebrated Bajwa’s exit Tuesday, sharing messages on social media sharply critical of the former army chief, tweeting images of handing out sweets or cutting cakes.

Shireen Mazari, a central PTI leader and former human rights minister, urged the military to abide by its constitutional oath of not interfering in politics.

Bajwa’s controversial career received a serious blow earlier this month, when an online Pakistani investigative website, Fact Focus, revealed that the military chief’s immediate and extended family members have accumulated assets worth more than $56 million since he took office in 2016.

The news outlet claimed — citing leaked tax records and wealth statements submitted to the Federal Board of Revenue — that Bajwa’s wife has increased her assets from zero to nearly $10 million during the period in question.

The report prompted Pakistan Finance Minister Ishaq Dar to order an immediate investigation into what he denounced as the “illegal and unwarranted” leak of the confidential tax records of the army chief’s family in violation of tax laws, though he did not question the authenticity of the leaked documents.

Dar recently told local media the FBR had traced the identities of the officials behind the leak, but he shared no other details.

On Sunday, the Pakistan military’s media wing, for the first time, refuted the claims of unusual increases in wealth for Bajwa and his family as “misleading” and exaggerated.

Munir took command a day after an outlawed alliance of militant groups waging terrorism in Pakistan announced it had ended a “cease-fire” with the government and ordered fighters to resume nationwide attacks wherever possible.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, said in a statement Monday the violence was being unleashed in response to sustained government military operations against the group in breach of the truce.

Pakistani officials dismissed TTP claims as “lame excuses” and vowed to prevent any attempt by the militants to regroup or reorganize anywhere in the country.

The Pakistani Taliban have carried out hundreds of suicide bombings and other terrorist attacks since emerging in Pakistan in 2007.

The TTP is widely believed to be an offshoot of Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban and its leaders are currently based in the neighboring country.

The Afghan Taliban brokered and hosted several rounds of talks between Pakistan and the TTP, leading to the cease-fire. But officials in Islamabad say the truce was never honored by the militants, citing a spike in deadly terrorist attacks in Pakistan in recent months. The Taliban government in Kabul denies it is allowing the TTP to launch cross-border attacks.

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Afghan Refugee Opens Store in Texas to Keep Culture Alive

Ajmal Zazai, who fled Afghanistan after the Taliban’s takeover, now runs a store in San Antonio, Texas, selling traditional Afghan clothes and carpets For VOA, Zabiullah Ghazi has the story, narrated by Nazrana Yousufzai. Roshan Noorzai contributed.

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Afghan Taliban to Host Female Pakistan Minister for Bilateral Talks

A high-level Pakistani delegation will visit Afghanistan on Tuesday to discuss with the ruling Islamist Taliban cooperation in trade, education, investment, regional connectivity and security.

Officials in Islamabad said Monday that Hina Rabbani Khar, the female Pakistani minister of state for foreign affairs, will lead the daylong meetings with leaders of the men-only Taliban government in Kabul.

Khar will also renew Pakistan’s “continued commitment and support” for strengthening Afghan peace and prosperity, said the foreign ministry statement.

“As a friend and neighbor of Afghanistan, Pakistan will reaffirm its abiding solidarity with the people of Afghanistan, in particular through its efforts to ease the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan and to create real opportunities for economic prosperity of Afghan men, women and children,” the statement added.

Khar is scheduled to meet Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi and Prime Minister Mullah Hassan Akhund.

“The high-ranking Pakistani delegation is arriving tomorrow to discuss political and economic relations between the two countries,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed on Twitter.

The visit comes amid intensified international criticism and calls for the Taliban administration to reverse its curbs on women and girls’ fundamental rights to public life and education.

Last week, a panel of independent experts at the United Nations denounced the restrictions as “the most severe and unacceptable” in the world, warning the Taliban that their treatment of women and girls could amount to a “crime against humanity.”

The Islamist rulers rejected the criticism of their governance, saying it is compliant with Afghan culture and Islamic law. The Taliban regained power in August 2021 from the then-U.S. backed Afghan government as the United States, along with NATO allies, withdrew their troops from the country after battling the insurgent group for almost two decades.

Pakistan’s latest round of talks with the Taliban comes just days after deadly clashes between border security forces of the two countries. The tensions had prompted Islamabad to temporarily seal two out of several border crossings with Afghanistan earlier this month.

The landlocked nation mostly relies on Pakistani overland routes and seaports for bilateral and international trade.

Border tensions between the two South Asian nations are not uncommon along their 2,600-kilometer frontier. Afghanistan disputes the more than a century-old boundary drawn by British colonial rulers.

Pakistan rejects Afghan objections and calls the demarcation an international border, and so does the rest of the world.

While several countries, including Pakistan, Russia, China, Turkey, Qatar and Iran, have kept their embassies open in Kabul since the return of the Taliban rule, the world at large has not yet recognized the new government over human rights and terrorism-related concerns.

Officials in Islamabad, however, downplay mutual tensions stemming from border and security concerns. They maintain the two issues would come under discussion but the focus of Khar’s meetings in Kabul would be to exchange views on projects that could help promote bilateral economic connectivity.

Despite prevailing skepticism, Pakistan says it is determined to boost economic and security cooperation with the Taliban to help sustain fragile peace and stability after four decades of deadly hostilities in Afghanistan.

Islamabad says economic stability is key to deterring cross-border terrorism and preventing an influx of refugees to Pakistan, which already hosts nearly 3 million Afghans, both as refugees and economic migrants.

Pakistani authorities have recently removed tariffs and eased visa rules to facilitate bilateral as well as Afghan transit to address a humanitarian crisis in the neighboring country where the United Nations warns millions of people face acute food shortages.

Islamabad has also increased Afghan coal imports since the Taliban returned to power, tilting the annual trade balance in favor of Kabul for the first time in the history of bilateral relations. The annual trade volume as of Monday stood at more than $1.5 billion, with Afghan exports to Pakistan worth more than $800 million.

The change is attributed mainly to increased purchases of Afghan coal in the wake of rising global prices in a bid to reduce Pakistan’s dependence on expensive supplies from countries such as South Africa.

Traders say about 10,000 metric tons of coal is being exported daily to Pakistan, helping the Taliban generate much needed revenue to govern the country.

Khar is expected to discuss whether daily coal imports could be raised to a level where they enable Pakistan to meet its estimated monthly needs of at least 1 million metric tons.

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Pakistan Taliban Announce Resumption of Nationwide Terror Attacks 

An outlawed alliance of militant groups waging terrorism in Pakistan declared Monday that it had ordered fighters to resume nationwide attacks, ending an already shaky “unilateral cease-fire” with the government.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, said the decision to unleash the violence was taken in retaliation to “sustained military operations” by the government against its fighters in several northwestern districts.

“Now it is imperative for you to carry out attacks wherever possible across the country,” the TTP ordered its fighters in a statement released to media outlets, including VOA.

The group, listed as a global terrorist organization by the United States and the United Nations, is an off-shoot and close ally of Afghanistan’s ruling Islamist Taliban.

The TTP has claimed responsibility for hundreds of suicide bombings and other attacks since its emergence in Pakistan in 2007, killing tens of thousands of civilians and security forces. Its leaders and fighters largely fled into hiding in Afghanistan after the Pakistan government ordered a major military operation, backed by air power, against the group in 2014.

The security action had significantly reduced militant violence in Pakistan in the years that followed until attacks resurged over the past year.

A senior Pakistani security official dismissed TTP assertions as “lame excuses” for calling off its truce.

“If they are trying to reorganize or regroup here for terrorist activities, then we have the right to preempt it,” the official told VOA. He spoke on the condition of anonymity for lacking authority to formally speak to the media.

“Pakistan has sacrificed thousands of its citizens in combating terrorism. It is reflective of the fact that we are nationally resolved to fight this menace,” the official emphasized.

Islamabad believes that since seizing power in Kabul more than a year ago, the Afghan Taliban have turned a blind eye to TTP activities, and the group enjoys greater operational freedom to plot cross-border attacks.

The complaints prompted the Taliban government to broker and host crucial peace talks between TTP and Pakistani government negotiators, leading to the so-called “unilateral cease-fire” in June.

But Pakistani officials maintain the effort did not ease the terrorism threat originating in Afghanistan, killing hundreds of people, mostly security forces since the start of 2022.

Taliban authorities in Kabul reject allegations their territory is being used by foreign groups, including TTP, to threaten Pakistan or other countries.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the chief Taliban government spokesman, told VOA in a recent interview in the Afghan capital they would arrest and try for “treason” TTP members, or anyone for that matter, if found guilty of using Afghan soil against other countries.

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World Cup Workers’ Families Left Behind in Nepal

Thousands of migrant workers died building World Cup and related structures ahead of the 2022 Qatar games and VOA photojournalist Yan Boechat visits with families of the fallen in Nepal. For more on these families, watch VOA’s documentary, “Cause of Death: Migrant Workers and the 2022 Qatar World Cup.”

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Pakistan Launches Polio Drive 

Pakistan authorities said they are launching a five-day polio drive to eradicate the crippling disease from the country.

Officials said 100,000 healthcare workers begin working Monday to vaccinate 13.5 million children under the age of five across 36 high risk districts, including Islamabad, the capital.

“Our aim is to ensure timely and repeated vaccination of eligible children,” said Shahzad Baig, the coordinator of the national emergency operations center.

“High-risk districts are our top priority and we are keen to eliminate the polio virus from the challenging areas, while protecting the rest of the region, as well,” said Baig.

Twenty cases of the wild polio virus were reported this year in Pakistan, including 17 in the country’s volatile North Waziristan district, located on the country’s border with Afghanistan.

Pakistan has come close, several times, to eradicating polio, but militants have convinced some parents that the vaccines cause sterility, but there is no scientific basis to back such statements.

Baig is urging all Pakistani parents and caregivers to make sure that their children are vaccinated “instead of hiding them or refusing to take the necessary drops during all vaccination drives.” He said, “it is important to realize that the polio virus still exists in our surroundings, and no child is safe until all children are truly vaccinated.”

Some information in this report came from The Associated Press.

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