Six Dead After Powerful Earthquake Hits Nepal, Rattles New Delhi

An earthquake of magnitude 6.6 struck Nepal early Wednesday, killing at least six people, destroying multiple houses in the western district of Doti and shaking the Indian capital New Delhi, officials said.

Five other people were seriously injured as eight houses collapsed, said Bhola Bhatta, deputy superintendent of police in Doti, confirming an earlier figure shared by home ministry official Tulsi Rijal. The injured had been rushed to a local hospital, police said.

Nepal is still rebuilding after two major earthquakes in 2015 killed almost 9,000 people, destroyed whole towns and centuries-old temples and caused a $6 billion blow to the economy.

“Expressing my heartfelt condolences to the families of those who died in the earthquake,” Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba wrote on Twitter. “I have instructed the relevant agencies to arrange immediate and proper treatment of the injured and the victims.”

Narayan Silwal, a spokesman for the Nepali army, said a ground rescue team has been rushed to the site and two helicopters were on standby in nearby Surkhet and Nepalgunj towns.

Kalpana Shrestha, a senior bureaucrat of Doti district, said details were being collected from villages near the epicenter and that one child was among those rescued from under the debris.

Nepal’s seismological center set the earthquake at a magnitude of 6.6. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) had pegged the earthquake at a magnitude of 5.6.

The quake was centered about 158 km (100 miles) northeast of Pilibhit, a populous city in the neighboring Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, and occurred at a depth of 10 km, EMSC added.

Media reports after the quake showed tremors were also felt in New Delhi and surrounding areas, some 350km (220 miles) from Doti.

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Officials: Biden to Meet With Leaders of Egypt, Cambodia, Indonesia

U.S. President Joe Biden will meet with the leaders of Egypt, Cambodia and Indonesia during a wide-ranging trip that includes an international climate summit and meetings of ASEAN and the Group of 20 industrialized nations, senior administration officials said on Tuesday.

The officials were not able to say whether Biden would have a separate meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, who is expected to attend the summit, and what their agenda might include. The two governments have been working toward arranging what would be the first face-to-face meeting between the two leaders since Biden took office in January 2021.

Biden will begin his trip by traveling to Egypt to participate in the COP27 United Nations Climate Change Conference on Friday, where he will talk about America’s efforts to reduce emissions and also hold a bilateral meeting with Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the officials said.

He will then travel to Cambodia from Saturday to Sunday to participate in the annual summit between the U.S. and Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN. He will also participate in the East Asia Summit, where he will focus on the Indo-Pacific region and talk about U.S. commitment to a rules-based international order in the South China Sea, they said.

From Sunday to November 16, Biden will visit Indonesia to participate in a summit of leaders from the Group of 20 major economies. He will be “unapologetic” in defending Ukraine and calling out Russia during the meeting, one of the officials said.

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Pakistan Interior Minister: Evidence Suggests Shot Reporter Targeted in Kenya

Pakistan’s interior minister said Tuesday that evidence suggests a prominent Pakistani journalist was the victim of a targeted killing in Kenya, not an accidental shooting, though he still needed more information on the incident.

Kenyan police spokesman Bruno Shioso declined to respond to the minister’s comments on the death of TV journalist Arshad Sharif, who was shot dead on the evening of October 23 on the outskirts of the Kenyan capital Nairobi.

A police report a day after the shooting said police officers hunting car thieves opened fire on the vehicle that Sharif was traveling in as it drove through their roadblock without stopping.

Shioso said the case was now being investigated by the police watchdog, the state Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA).

A spokesperson at the IPOA did not immediately respond to calls and a message seeking comment.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister, Rana Sanaullah, told journalists Tuesday: “Arshad Sharif’s death is not a case of mistaken identity – I can say, and on the evidence we have so far, this prima facie is a target killing.”

“We still need to obtain more [evidence] to confirm all this … and we have asked the Kenyan government for more data,” he added.

Pakistan’s government formed an investigation team to look into the matter, which caused uproar in the country.

Sanaullah said the team had returned from Kenya, but Kenyan police had not yet given Pakistani investigators all of Sharif’s recovered belongings.

“We will now ask the foreign office to contact the Kenyan government, and the prime minister will also speak to the Kenyan president,” the minister said.

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UNICEF: Children Suffer Most from Climate Crises Not of Their Making

UNICEF warns millions of children caught in climate-induced disasters are at risk of starvation, disease, exploitation, and death.

A UNICEF analysis released Tuesday finds 27.7 million children in 27 countries have been affected by flooding so far this year. Among them, Chad, the Gambia, and northeast Bangladesh have recorded the worst floods in a generation.  The agency reports Pakistan’s record-breaking floods have killed nearly 1,700 people, 615 of them children.

 

UNICEF’s global communication and advocacy director, Paloma Escudero, says she saw for herself the enormity of the disaster during a visit to Pakistan last week. She says the needs are vast, adding 10 million girls and boys need immediate lifesaving support.

 

“The floods have contaminated drinking water, which is spawning deadly water-borne diseases such as acute watery diarrhea, which compounds already acute malnutrition,” Escudero said.  “Estimates suggest close to 1.6 million children in flood areas could be suffering from severe acute malnutrition.”   

 

She notes stagnant water is a perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes, increasing the risk of malaria and dengue. She warns many vulnerable children and young people will die in the days and weeks to come without urgent action.

 

Escudero spoke on a video link from Sharm el-Sheikh, site of COP27, the climate change conference. She says scientists have found the recent floods in Pakistan have been made worse by climate change. While children are the least responsible for creating this problem, she says they are suffering the most.

 

“In Africa, just like in Pakistan, children are paying the price for a climate disaster not of their making. From the extreme drought and risk of famine in Somalia to the erratic rains across the Sahel, UNICEF is being challenged to respond at an unprecedented scale to emergencies that have all the markings of climate-induced disasters,” Escudero said. 

 

UNICEF reports children account for almost half of the more than 20 million people facing famine in drought-stricken Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia.

 

Nearly 40 youth climate activists from around the world are in Sharm el-Sheikh. They are working with UNICEF to sensitize delegates to the severe impact of the climate crisis on the world’s poorest, most vulnerable children.

 

Escudero notes it is not up to young people to keep raising the alarm. What is needed, she says, is for people with power to start acting.

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Tensions Escalate Between Pakistan’s Ousted PM Khan and Military

Pakistan’s populist opposition leader Imran Khan has written a rare letter to President Arif Alvi demanding an investigation into what he alleges are “serious wrongdoings” and political interference by top military officials, including the country’s spy chief.

The 70-year-old former prime minister survived an apparent assassination attempt last Thursday while he was leading a rally to demand fresh elections for his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Party (PTI) in the province of Punjab. He suffered bullet wounds to his right leg and is recovering at home in the provincial capital, Lahore.

On Monday, PTI released a copy of Khan’s letter to Alvi in which the opposition leader repeated his allegations that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, the interior minister and a senior official of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had plotted the attack.

Khan claimed he had information from within Pakistani intelligence agencies that a plot was being hatched to assassinate him. The cricket-star-turned politician has offered no evidence to substantiate the allegations and demanded the three men resign to make way for an impartial probe into the attempt on his life.

The government and the military have rejected the charges as “baseless and irresponsible” and “absolutely unacceptable and uncalled for.”

In the letter, Khan lambasted ISI chief Lieutenant General Nadeem Anjum and Lieutenant General Babar Iftikhar, head of the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), for addressing a nationally televised news conference against him late last month. This was the first time in Pakistan’s history that an ISI chief formally spoke to reporters.

“Two related questions that should be examined are: How the head of Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency can do a public press conference? How can two military bureaucrats do a highly political press conference targeting the leader of the largest federal political party?” Khan asked.

“You hold the highest office of state, and I am requesting you to act now to stop the abuse of power and violations of our laws and constitutions,” Khan wrote to the president, who is also the supreme commander of the armed forces of Pakistan. He asked Alvi “to identify the “guilty and hold them accountable.”

The PTI chief also criticized the ISPR for making statements against political leaders. He wrote that the role of the ISPR needs “to be clearly defined and limited to information related to defense and military issues.”

Neither the president’s office nor the military has responded to the letter.

A security official told VOA by phone that Khan’s letter is nothing but “twisting facts and figures for gaining political mileage.”

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, urged Khan to desist from levelling baseless charges and making “irresponsible” statements until an inquiry is held into the gun attack against him.

Khan was removed as prime minister through a parliamentary vote of no-confidence in April. He accused the United States of toppling his government in collusion with Pakistan’s powerful military and political opponents, without providing any evidence.

Washington and Islamabad deny any role in his removal.

Khan complained in his letter to the president that since the toppling of his government, his party has been confronted with “an ever-increasing scale of false allegations, harassment, arrests and custodial torture.”

U.S.-based expert Michael Kugelman described the letter as an extraordinary move, saying the former prime minister appears to be going over the military leadership’s head by directly appealing to the president to rein the military in.

“In practice, the president’s role is ceremonial and there’s not much he can do. Still, it’s significant that Khan has escalated his tactics beyond confronting the military directly to trying to undermine the military by appealing to its purported commander,” said Kugelman, the director of South Asia Institute at the Wilson Center in Washington.

“Khan in effect is going full bore in his confrontation with the military leadership. But given that he retains support within some factions of the military and given that he is keen to win back more support from the military, these maximalist tactics run the risk of backfiring and working against his interests,” Kugelman cautioned.

Anjum and Iftikhar reiterated during their unprecedented Oct. 27 news conference that the military had no role in Khan’s ouster.

Anjum also accused Khan of pressing the military for “illegal and unconstitutional” backing for his government in the run-up to the vote of no-confidence. He did not elaborate.

The military has ruled Pakistan for more than 30 years since it gained independence from Britain in 1947. Former prime ministers and political parties acknowledge the military institution directs security and foreign policy even when elected governments govern the country.

In the news conference last month, Anjum admitted the military had made mistakes in the past but insisted it had recently decided to stay out of politics.

Khan’s popularity has grown dramatically since his removal from power. He has been able to mobilize tens of thousands of people at his anti-government rallies across Pakistan, enabling the PTI to sweep recent by-elections for the National Assembly — the lower house of parliament — and the Punjab legislature.

On Sunday, Khan announced his party will resume its protest march on Islamabad later this week from the same place where the gun attack had targeted him. He added that he will join the march in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, which borders the capital and where the marchers are due to reach in about 10 days.

The PTI protest march began on October 28 before being suspended last Thursday in the wake of the attack on Khan. The march aims to force Sharif into announcing snap elections in Pakistan.

But the government has rejected the demand, saying the polls would be held in October 2023, when the constitutional term of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, ends.

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Pakistan’s Ex-PM Khan Asks President to Probe Military Officials for Political Interference, Assassination Bid

Pakistan’s populist opposition leader Imran Khan has written a rare letter to President Arif Alvi demanding an investigation into what he alleges are “serious wrongdoings” and political interference by top military officials, including the country’s spy chief.  

The 70-year-old former prime minister survived an apparent assassination attempt last Thursday while he was leading a pro-election rally of his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Party (PTI) in the province of Punjab. He suffered bullet wounds to his right leg and is recovering at home in the provincial capital, Lahore.  

On Monday, PTI released a copy of Khan’s letter to Alvi in which the opposition leader repeated his allegations that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, the interior minister and a senior official of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) had plotted the attack.  

Khan claimed he had information from within Pakistani intelligence agencies that a plot was being hatched to assassinate him. The cricket-star-turned politician has offered no evidence to substantiate the allegations and demanded the three men resign to make way for an impartial probe into the attempt on his life.  

The government and the military have rejected the charges as “baseless and irresponsible” and “absolutely unacceptable and uncalled for.”  

In the letter, Khan lambasted ISI chief Lieutenant General Nadeem Anjum and Lieutenant General Babar Iftikhar, head of the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), for addressing a nationally televised news conference against him late last month. This was the first time in Pakistan’s history that an ISI chief formally spoke to reporters.  

“Two related questions that should be examined are: How the head of Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency can do a public press conference. How can two military bureaucrats do a highly political press conference targeting the leader of the largest federal political party?” Khan asked. 

“You hold the highest office of state, and I am requesting you to act now to stop the abuse of power and violations of our laws and constitutions,” Khan wrote to the president, who is also the supreme commander of the armed forces of Pakistan. He asked Alvi “to identify the guilty and hold them accountable.” 

The PTI chief also criticized the ISPR for making statements against political leaders. He wrote that the role of the ISPR needs “to be clearly defined and limited to information related to defense and military issues.” 

Neither the president’s office nor the military has responded to the letter.  

A security official told VOA by phone that Khan’s letter is nothing but “twisting facts and figures for gaining political mileage.”  

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, urged Khan to desist from leveling baseless charges and making “irresponsible” statements until an inquiry is held into the gun attack against him. 

Khan was removed as prime minister through a parliamentary vote of no-confidence in April. He accused the United States of toppling his government in collusion with Pakistan’s powerful military and political opponents, without providing any evidence.  

Washington and Islamabad deny any role in his removal. 

Khan complained in his letter to the president that since the toppling of his government, his party has been confronted with “an ever-increasing scale of false allegations, harassment, arrests and custodial torture.” 

Anjum and Iftikhar reiterated during their unprecedented October 27 news conference that the military had no role in Khan’s ouster.  

Anjum also accused Khan of pressing the military for “illegal and unconstitutional” backing for his government in the run-up to the vote of no-confidence. He did not elaborate.  

The military has ruled Pakistan for more than 30 years since it gained independence from Britain in 1947. Former prime ministers and political parties acknowledge the military institution directs security and foreign policy even when elected governments govern the country.  

In the news conference last month, Anjum admitted the military had made mistakes in the past but insisted it had recently decided to stay out of politics.  

Khan’s popularity has grown dramatically since his removal from power. He has been able to mobilize tens of thousands of people at his anti-government rallies across Pakistan, enabled the PTI to sweep recent by-elections for the National Assembly — the lower house of parliament — and the Punjab legislature.  

On Sunday, Khan announced his party will resume its protest march on Islamabad later this week from the same place where the gun attack had targeted him. He added that he will join the march in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, which borders the capital and where the marchers are due to reach in about 10 days.  

The PTI protest march began on October 28 before being suspended last Thursday in the wake of the attack on Khan. The march aims to force Sharif into announcing snap elections in Pakistan.  

But the government has rejected the demand, saying the polls would be held in October 2023, when the constitutional term of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, ends. 

 

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Former US-Trained Afghan Commandos Recruited by Russia, Iran

Some former members of Afghanistan’s special forces who fled to Iran after the Taliban’s takeover in Afghanistan are now being recruited to fight for Russia in Ukraine and for Iran in Yemen, two former senior Afghan security officials told VOA.

The former Afghan army chief, General Haibatullah Alizai, said Tehran is using the vulnerability of former Afghan forces now living in the country to recruit them to strengthen the ranks of Houthi rebels in Yemen.

“When former Afghan military members go to immigration bureaus in Iran to extend their visas, they are told to go to Yemen to fight in support of the Houthis,” Alizai told VOA.

Mohammad Farid Ahmadi, the former commander of Afghanistan’s elite National Army Commando Corps, told VOA that former Afghan special forces now are engaged in “six critical areas” of the world: Nagorno-Karabakh, Ukraine, Yemen, Iran, Syria and Russia, but “in small groups.”

Afghan commandos who were trained by the U.S. and NATO are considered the most experienced former military personnel in Afghanistan. Before the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban, the commandos were led most of the complex combat operations throughout the country.

The Associated Press reported that Russia is now also seeking to recruit former Afghan special forces in Iran to fight alongside their military in Ukraine by offering them “$1,500-a-month payments and promises of safe havens for themselves and their families.”

Officials with the Russian embassy in Washington and Iran’s United Nations representatives have not responded to emailed questions about whether their governments are recruiting former Afghan armed forces and commandos. The Associated Press reported that Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner Group, dismissed claims of recruiting former Afghan soldiers as “crazy nonsense.”

But pressuring Afghans to fight is not a new tactic. In 2016, Human Rights Watch said Iran was using Afghan refugees as soldiers to fight in Syria.

Taliban threat

Former Army Commando Corps leader Ahmadi said there were about 30,000 commandos serving in Afghanistan before the Taliban took control of Kabul.

“Now a big majority of Afghan former commandos are inside Afghanistan, disguising and living in hiding,” said Ahmadi, adding that “a number of them were detained and tortured by the Taliban.”

According to a report published a few months ago by the U.S. Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), former Afghan commandos who have stayed in the country have “almost certainly” joined the fledgling opposition group known as the National Resistance Front or are living in hiding out of fear of being killed or imprisoned by the Taliban.

Ahmadi said some of the former soldiers were held and tortured in Taliban prisons. But he said after tribal elders intervened, many were released after they paid money and vowed never to speak of their treatment in prison.

Ahmadi says Afghan special forces feel betrayed by the country’s former political leaders and he describes many now as “desperate, hopeless and vulnerable.”

He also urged officials in Washington to try to help those Afghans who fought shoulder to shoulder with the U.S. forces for the past 20 years.

“The U.S. should fulfill its promises and not let these forces be hired as mercenaries,” Ahmadi said.

Washington ‘in a difficult position’

At a Washington news briefing on October 31, State Department spokesperson Edward Price responded to questions about the recruitment of Afghan commandos by saying, “I’m aware of those reports. I’m not aware, though, that we have been in a position to confirm that such Afghan commandos have actually been enlisted into President Putin’s war.”

Rand Corporation policy researcher Jason Campbell said that limited U.S. reach in parts of Iran and Taliban-controlled Afghanistan where former Afghan commandos live puts Washington, logistically speaking, “in a difficult position.”

“It’s certainly a hard decision for the U.S. to make in terms of trying to take steps to ensure the safety of all these thousands of commandos, particularly in light of recent developments, where, as we said, certainly Russia but [also] other states might see an opportunity here to recruit some of these … seasoned and well-trained fighters who find themselves living in desperate conditions,” Campbell said.

Bill Roggio, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, told VOA that the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan created this problem.

“This is one of the unforeseen consequences of the U.S. disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan. We left behind tens of thousands of highly trained Afghan soldiers. These are the commandos who are quite capable. They were on the frontlines in the fight against the Taliban,” he said.

Roggio added, “Some [former Afghan commandos] have gone into Iran, but by Russia opening up the opportunity for them to possibly get Russian citizenship and telling them that you fight for us in Ukraine, we will help you and help your family. That is quite appealing.”

Lina Rozbih contributed to this report. This story originated in VOA’s Afghan service.

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Indian Foreign Minister Heads to Russia for Talks Expected to Include Ukraine Conflict 

Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar is visiting Moscow for talks expected to focus on economic and political issues.

The two-day visit during which the Indian minister will meet his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Trade and Industry, Denis Manturov, will be the first by a senior Indian official to Russia since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February.

Analysts say while most attention has been focused on the softer stance India has taken on Russia’s invasion and its continued purchase of cheap Russian oil and coal despite Western sanctions, New Delhi has also been using its leverage based on longstanding ties with Moscow to underline the need to end hostilities.

Ahead of the visit that starts Monday, Indian foreign ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi told reporters that India has always emphasized the need to return to diplomacy and dialogue to resolve the conflict. “I am sure that the external affairs minister would certainly be reiterating it,” he said on Thursday.

The minister will be “looking at the economic elements” as well as exchange of views on “regional and international developments,” Bagchi said.

India has not publicly called out Russia for the conflict and has abstained from United Nations resolutions critical of Moscow’s aggression, but it has repeatedly said that it opposes the conflict and expressed concern about the violence.

“We believe that the conflict does not serve the interests of anybody, neither the participants nor indeed of the international community,” foreign minister Jaishankar said at a press conference during a visit to Australia last month.

In September, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Russian President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of a regional summit in Samarkand that “today’s era is not an era of war, and I have spoken to you on the phone about this that democracy, diplomacy and dialogue are such things that touch the world.”

Modi said that the world was grappling with major challenges, including food and energy crises that were hitting developing countries especially hard.

“India would be reiterating the need for some kind of a resolution, some kind of a political settlement during the visit because it cannot be an open-ended conflict,” said Harsh Pant, head of the strategic studies program at the Observer Research Foundation in New Delhi. “Because India does not want to call Russia out publicly, private conversations will certainly allow [for] that to happen.”

The war on Ukraine has posed a huge challenge for India in trying to balance its decades-long relations with Russia and its growing ties with the West. It does not want to antagonize either side — Russia is a huge arms supplier, while concerns about an aggressive China have prompted India to enhance strategic ties with the United States and embrace the Quad — a grouping of Japan, Australia U.S., and India.

But standing apart from its Quad partners, New Delhi has refused to support existing sanctions or impose their own on Moscow. It also has strongly defended its growing purchases of crude from Moscow at discounted prices — India has repeatedly said that it takes decisions based on its national interests and as a major oil and coal importer, its people need access to cheaper oil.

Russia became India’s largest supplier of crude oil in October surpassing traditional suppliers, Saudi Arabia and Iraq, according to local reports.

However, as the war in Ukraine continues, the pressure on India to ensure that it does not alienate Western countries is growing.

“While New Delhi has been able to make its point to its Western partners for the moment, this window of opportunity will not be forever and there are worries that the longer the war drags out, the space for India in doing so will become narrower,” Pant said.

But at the same time, New Delhi’s good ties with Moscow also offer leverage, observers say. “There is a sense that India remains one of the few countries that enjoys some level of confidence of both sides, so there is a possibility that India can play a more proactive role than in the past in any potential efforts to resolve the conflict. All of these assumptions will be tested during this visit,” he said.

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Former PM Khan Says March on Pakistani Capital to Resume Tuesday

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said Sunday that a protest march toward the capital, which was suspended after he was wounded by a gunshot in an apparent attempt on his life, will resume Tuesday.

Sitting in a wheelchair, his right leg bandaged and elevated, Khan spoke from the Shaukat Khanum hospital, where he was admitted Thursday after he received bullet wounds in his right leg.

Khan repeated his demand for an investigation into the shooting and the resignation of three powerful personalities in the government and the military whom he alleges were involved in staging the attack on him.

Khan’s march on the capital was suspended in Wazirabad, a district in eastern Punjab province, after a gunman opened fire, wounding him and killing one of his supporters. Thirteen others were hurt. He said the march would pick up again from Wazirabad.

Khan was ousted from office in April in a no-confidence vote in parliament. He organized a march on Islamabad to pressure Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif’s government to hold early elections, but Sharif says elections will take place as scheduled, in 2023. Khan led an initial protest march in May, but it ended when supporters clashed with police in the capital.

Khan’s protest march, which started Oct. 28, was peaceful until Thursday’s attack. The shooting has raised concerns about growing political instability in Pakistan, which has a history of political violence and assassinations.

Khan said the march, to be resumed Tuesday, will take 10 to 15 days to reach Rawalpindi, where convoys from other parts of the country are expected to join the rally. He said he will keep in touch with the main march participants through a media link and will eventually lead the “sea of people'” toward Islamabad.

Khan accused Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah Khan and army Gen. Faisal Naseer of working with the Inter-Services Intelligence, Pakistan’s spy agency, to orchestrate the shooting. The minister and the former premier are not related.

Khan offered no evidence for his allegations, which were rejected by Sharif’s government and the military spokesman said the allegations were not true.

Khan was discharged from the hospital later Sunday and moved to his ancestral home in Lahore.

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Taliban Reveal Burial Place of Founder Mullah Omar, Nine Years After Death

The Taliban on Sunday revealed the final resting place of the movement’s founder, Mullah Omar, whose death and burial they kept secret for years.

Rumors surrounding Omar’s health and whereabouts abounded after the Taliban were kicked out of power in 2001 by a U.S.-led invasion, and they only admitted in April 2015 that he had died two years earlier.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Agence France-Presse Sunday that senior leaders of the movement attended a ceremony at his gravesite earlier in the day near Omarzo, in Suri district of Zabul province.

The Taliban returned to power in August last year, routing government forces as the U.S.-led military that propped up the regime ended a 20-year occupation.

“Since a lot of enemies were around and the country was occupied, to avoid damage to the tomb it was kept secret,” Mujahid said. “Only the close family members were aware of the place.” 

Pictures released by officials showed Taliban leaders gathered around a simple white brick tomb, covered with what appears to be gravel and enclosed in a green metal cage.

“Now the decision has been made… there are no issues for the people to visit the tomb,” Mujahid said.

Omar, who was around 55 years old when he died, founded the Taliban in 1993 as an antidote to the internecine civil war that erupted following the decade-long Soviet occupation.

Under his leadership, the Taliban introduced an extremely austere version of Islamic rule, barring women from public life and introducing harsh public punishments — including executions and floggings.

Omar’s ceremony comes a day after provincial Taliban officials denied reports that the Panjshir Valley tomb of resistance hero Ahmad Shah Massoud had been vandalized, an act Mujahid said would be “punished” if true.

Massoud has a mixed legacy in the country, where he is hailed by ordinary Afghans for leading the resistance against the Soviet occupation but loathed by the Taliban he also fought until his 2001 assassination by al-Qaida.

His tomb is in an imposing granite and marble mausoleum overlooking the picturesque Panjshir Valley and guarded by Taliban fighters since their takeover of the country in August last year.

Local residents said a newly arrived contingent of fighters smashed the tombstone, and video of the desecrated grave — which could not be verified — was published by local media and circulating widely on social channels.

“It happened when the new forces entered Panjshir. The new forces from Helmand and Kandahar destroyed the tombstone of the national hero,” one resident told AFP.

Nasrullah Malakzada, head of information and culture of Panjshir province, denied the tomb had been damaged and issued a video purporting to show it intact.

The clip, however, pointedly did not display the entire structure — particularly the part seen damaged in the original video.

Malakzada refused requests by journalists to visit or photograph the tomb for themselves.

Mujahid told reporters that nobody had the right to insult the dead.

“Previously we had punished those who committed such acts,” he said, adding “this will be investigated as well and necessary action will be taken.”

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Taliban Lambaste Biden for Calling Afghanistan ‘God-Forsaken’

The Islamist Taliban government has harshly criticized U.S. President Joe Biden for calling Afghanistan a “God-forsaken place” and vowed to rebuild the war-ravaged country without any foreign support.

“Those making such remarks are doing so out of their frustration and envy for Afghanistan,” Chief Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid told a news conference Saturday in Kabul. He went on to tout the return of peace and stability to the South Asian nation since the Taliban takeover, saying Afghans “are going about with their daily lives normally.”

During a speech Friday in California, Biden praised war veterans for serving in Afghanistan, and repeatedly referred to the country as a “God-forsaken” area. He recounted his several trips to the Afghan war zone as a senator and vice president of the United States.

“A lot of you have been to Afghanistan. I’ve been to every part of it. It’s a God-forsaken place — it’s a God-forsaken place,” Biden said. 

The U.S. president pulled out all American troops along with NATO allies in August 2021, after two decades of war with the then-Taliban insurgency. The withdrawal encouraged the Islamist group to immediately regain control of Afghanistan.

The Costs of War Project at Brown University estimates the longest military intervention in the U.S. history cost Washington about $2 trillion and took the lives of more than 2,400 American soldiers since 2001.

The United States and other Western partners immediately suspended financial assistance to Kabul after the Taliban seized power in mid-August last year from the then-internationally backed Afghan government.  

The Biden administration subsequently imposed banking sector sanctions and froze billions of dollars in Afghan central bank’s foreign reserves. The economic restrictions pushed the economy to the brink of collapse and worsened humanitarian conditions in Afghanistan.

Mujahid said Saturday the Taliban did not require support from other nations to rebuild the country, arguing that Afghans are “capable” of doing it on their own. “However, our objective is, and so is our need, to seek better and trustworthy diplomatic relations with the international community, including America,” he said. 

“We would welcome legitimate contacts and interactions with any country to further mutual ties,” Mujahid said.  He noted that his government representatives in recent engagements with U.S. officials have time and again stressed the need for building “constructive” ties to enable both sides to address mutual concerns.

No country has formally recognized the Taliban government because the Islamist group has reintroduced some of the harsh policies from their 1996-2001 rule in the improvised country. The Taliban have placed curbs on women, effectively restricting their access to work and education. Teenage Afghan girls are barred from receiving a secondary-school education.  

The U.S. and the international community at large have been pressing Taliban leaders to uphold their pledges and respect the rights of all Afghans and govern the country inclusively — if they want legitimacy for their rule.

The Taliban defend their policies, saying they are in line with Afghan culture and Islamic tenets. They also have dismissed calls for ensuring political inclusivity in the government, saying all Afghan groups are adequately represented in it.

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Radical Hindu Leader Shot Dead in India’s Sikh Holy City

A radical Hindu leader was shot dead in full public view in India on Friday as he protested the alleged desecration of his faith’s idols, police said.

Sudhir Suri, 58, the self-styled leader of a fundamentalist religious group, Hindu Shiv Sena, was killed in the northern city of Amritsar — the site of the Sikh faith’s holiest shrine, the Golden Temple.

“The assailant arrived on the spot and shot him dead in full public view,” top police officer Arun Pal Singh told AFP, adding Suri had been shot several times.

The attacker was detained at the scene and was found to be carrying a licensed weapon, he said.

Suri, who according to local media reports enjoyed police protection, had sparked the anger of many Sikhs who accused him of making derogatory remarks about their faith and community.

Media reports said that he was shot while protesting against what he claimed was the discovery of desecrated Hindu idols on a rubbish dump in the city.

In 2020, Suri was arrested after enraged members of the Sikh community in India and abroad accused him of denigrating women and disparaging their faith in a video widely shared over social media.

He was again arrested on similar accusations in July.

Amritsar has seen several instances of religiously motivated killings in recent years.

In September, a young man was hacked to death in full public view after being accused of being drunk and chewing tobacco near the Golden Temple.

Three members of a radical Sikh warrior sect known for its puritanical moral code were arrested for the murder.

Last year a crowd beat a man to death on the grounds of the shrine after he jumped over a railing and approached the holy book with a sword.

The protection of shrines is a highly sensitive issue for the Sikh faith, and the consumption of tobacco, liquor or drugs on holy ground is considered an act of desecration.

The then Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards in 1984 after she ordered a brutal army assault on the Golden Temple to flush out separatists.

Her killing sparked a bloody pogrom in the capital New Delhi which left nearly 3,000 Sikhs dead.

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Pakistan’s Ex-PM Khan Blames Government, Army for Assassination Plot

Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan said Friday in his first public address after surviving an apparent assassination attempt that he was hit by four bullets in his right leg and sustained a fracture.

The 70-year-old populist leader spoke from a hospital in Lahore, the capital of Punjab province, where he had surgery and was recovering from his injuries.

Khan was leading a pro-election rally of his opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party Thursday and waving to his supporters from atop a purpose-built truck when the shooting happened in Wazirabad, about 150 kilometers from the provincial capital. The attack killed a PTI supporter and injured 13 others, including a lawmaker.

While sitting in a wheelchair, Khan said in his hourlong televised address that two gunmen had tried to assassinate him.

“There was a burst from one side, and another coming from the front,” he said, adding that he wouldn’t have survived if the gunmen had “synchronized” their attack.

A man suspected of firing at the political rally was swiftly detained by police. In a leaked purported video confession, the detainee said he had acted alone and wanted to kill Khan for “misleading the public.”

Khan accused Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif along with the country’s interior minister and a senior military officer of plotting the attack, but he did not produce any evidence. He went on to demand the Pakistani army chief take action against what he called “black sheep” within the military and its intelligence services.

The opposition leader called on his supporters to stage street protests against the three top officials until they resign, making way for an impartial probe into the attempt on his life.

“As long as these three men don’t resign, you have to agitate and stand against injustice,” he said.

Federal Information Minister Marryam Aurangzeb swiftly refuted the charges.

“How Imran Khan, who has a government in Punjab where this incident took place, can demand [the] resignation of these three persons prior to any investigation into the matter,” Aurangzeb told a late-night news conference.

The PTI and an allied party govern the country’s most populous province.

The military’s media wing, the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), denounced Khan’s allegations against the security services as baseless and irresponsible.

“No one will be allowed to defame the [military] institution or its soldiers with impunity,” warned the ISPR.

The shooting angered Khan’s supporters, who again took to the streets across Pakistan on Friday, blocking roads and clashing with police in some cities. Security forces fired tear gas shells to prevent a large group of protesters from entering Islamabad and subsequently detained several of them.

Khan vowed to resume his protest march to the Pakistani capital once he recovers so he can press ahead with his campaign for early elections.

“I will take to the streets again as soon as I get well and will give a call to march on Islamabad,” he said.

The former prime minister was ousted from office in April through a parliamentary vote of no-confidence, allowing the then-opposition leader, Sharif, to replace him and form a new coalition government.

But Khan rejected his ouster as illegal, saying it was orchestrated by the United States in collusion with Sharif and Pakistan’s powerful military. He has yet to substantiate his allegations with any evidence. Washington and Islamabad deny any role in his removal.

Khan has been able to mobilize tens of thousands of people at his anti-government rallies across Pakistan, where he has increasingly directed his criticism at the military for its alleged meddling in politics.

His growing popularity has enabled the PTI to sweep recent by-elections for the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, and the Punjab legislature, allowing Khan to step up pressure on the Sharif government to call for “snap” general elections.

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After Fleeing Taliban, Afghan Journalists Find Visa, Money Woes

Afghan journalists who fled across the border to Pakistan to escape Taliban rule say they still face an uncertain future.  

Living in Pakistan often on temporary or family visas, many are unable to find work and are concerned about their legal status when their permits expire.  

“We don’t know what is going to happen to us,” said 24-year-old Waslat Khan.  

A presenter for the Kabul-based Jawanan TV until the Taliban took over Afghanistan in August 2021, Khan told VOA her three-month visa expired in June and she has “yet to receive an extension.”  

Living with her husband in a suburb of Islamabad, Khan said she fears jail or deportation after Pakistan announced new measures against those who overstay.  

Earlier this year, Pakistan’s Ministry of Interior announced a visa amnesty in place until Dec. 31, 2022. During that time, authorities will not issue charges for those who have overstayed a visa by up to a year.  

After that, authorities will take action. Under Pakistan’s 1946 Foreigners Act, overstaying a visa can result in up to three years in prison.   

The announcement has caused concern among the dozens of Afghan journalists who have fled to Pakistan.  

Neither the spokespersons for Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry nor the Interior Ministry  responded to VOA’s email requesting comment and further details on the visa amnesty.  

Qaiser Khan Afridi, a spokesperson for the U.N. Refugee Agency, or UNHCR, told VOA that his organization has called on host countries not to turn away Afghans whose lives would be at risk.  

“We have issued advisories, and we requested all the countries not to, you know, send back some of those whose lives might be at stake,” Afridi said. “Developed countries should also support the refugee-hosting countries such as Pakistan and Iran, because [those countries] have supported refugees for the last many years.”  

Khan believes her life would be in danger if forced to return to Afghanistan. 

“My house was searched many times, and I was forced to escape and come here to Pakistan,” she said.  

The journalist told VOA she received anonymous threats before Kabul fell saying if she didn’t leave her job, she would be killed. When the Taliban took power, her home was searched at least three times, “but fortunately I was not there,” she said.  

Her husband was later detained and beaten.  

Shortly after, Khan applied for a medical visa that allowed her entry to Pakistan. 

Since the Taliban has been in control, the environment for Afghan journalists has declined, with media rights groups citing censorship, violence and economic hardship. Female reporters are most affected. 

Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders has found that since August 2021, 40% of Afghan media outlets have closed, and 84% of women have lost their jobs. 

The Taliban did not respond to VOA’s request for comment.  

Escaping Afghanistan did not address all of Khan’s concerns. 

“I thought that I could find a job here [in Islamabad], and someone would support us. But I was wrong,” she said.  

Now, Khan said, she feels “hopeless” and “depressed” and says she doesn’t know what to do.  

‘Most are jobless’

Najibullah Habibi, the former owner of Tajala TV in central Maidan Wardak province, told VOA that around 250 to 300 Afghan journalists are now in Pakistan, including himself. 

Habibi moved to Islamabad with his wife and four children in March.  

“Afghan journalists who moved to Pakistan have multiple problems,” Habibi said.  

A few found work online, but “most of them are jobless,” he said. “Some of them even sold their laptops and cameras to get money to buy food and pay the rent.”  

A few international organizations have helped journalists, said Habibi, “but only those who have been threatened and provide documentation of that are helped financially.”   

“It is not easy to provide such documentation,” he added. 

Uncertain future

For Shukria Seddiqi, a journalist from the western province of Herat, financial issues are her biggest concern.  

Seddiqi worked for Radio Faryad before moving to Islamabad with her husband and their three children two months after the Taliban takeover.  

“We spent all the money that we brought with us here from Afghanistan,” she told VOA. “Now, we are asking our families and relatives in Afghanistan to send us money so we can live here in Pakistan. It is difficult. I worked for 14 years in Afghanistan, but now I have to stay home.”   

Pauline Ades-Mevel, editor-in-chief of RSF, told VOA that many of the Afghan journalists who fled to Pakistan don’t know how long they will stay. 

RSF is one of several media rights groups that helped evacuate “a number of journalists to European countries,” and which provides financial support to at-risk Afghans, Ades-Mevel said.  

Since the Taliban takeover, RSF has helped relocate more than 200 at-risk journalists and assisted in the cases of around 150 others.  

Ades-Mevel said RSF is in contact with Afghan journalists in Pakistan and other countries and is working with host countries.  

“There are hundreds of journalists, and RSF alone cannot cover them all, but we are doing everything we can to support them,” she said. 

Habibi said he and many other Afghan journalists want to be relocated to third countries.  

“We want to go to a place where our children would have a future,” he said. 

This story originated in VOA’s Afghan Service. 

 

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Indian Capital Closes Primary Schools as It Battles Deadly Winter Smog

The Indian capital will close primary schools starting Saturday in the latest emergency measure taken by authorities in a city shrouded for days in toxic gray smog.

As air quality levels plunged to levels considered “severe,” authorities have halted construction work to curb dust pollution, stopped trucks running on diesel from entering the city and deployed anti-smog guns — devices that spray a mist of water into the air to bind dust and air-borne particles.

Delhi’s Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said the government would also consider restrictions on road traffic to lower pollution levels. Half the government staff will work from home.

The deadly smog that envelops Delhi and surrounding regions every winter is a mix of car exhaust, construction dust and industrial emissions that hang low as wind speeds and temperatures drop. It becomes deadlier as winds blow smoke into the city from fires that farmers in neighboring states set to paddy straw at this time of the year to clear their fields for planting wheat.

The decision to shut down primary schools and to restrict outdoor activity for older students came amid growing demands from environmentalists and parents as the air quality level hit 470, which is nearly five times the global safety standards.

“Delhi is on fire right now, and it is only going to get worse over the next week. There is immediate need for emergency action until the situation improves because children are the most vulnerable,” said environmentalist Vimlendu Jha, founder of Swechha, a regionally based non-profit that works on environmental and youth issues. “And in the long term, we have to expand public transport so that we reduce the 15 million private vehicles on the road. Mobility cannot be private.”

In the city of 20 million, as many residents battled health problems caused by breathing the toxic air, the inevitable question was raised: Why is the Indian capital unable to tackle the pressing problem?

Experts said the city is losing the battle against the deadly haze that reappears every winter despite significant measures, such as shutting down coal-based power plants and switching to clean fuel for industries, largely because of its huge reliance on private transport and failure to end the burning of crop stubble.

Many of Delhi’s residents rely on private vehicles that include cars, motorcycles and auto rickshaws for their daily commute.

According to a recent study by the Delhi-based Center for Science and Environment (CSE), these vehicles have emerged as the biggest contributor among local sources of the winter haze in Delhi, accounting for almost 50% of the pollution.

“While the need is to scale up public transport, when you look at the actual investments in the city, the focus has been on building more roads — bigger roads, flyovers, overpasses and underpasses — to facilitate vehicular movement but not on improving the bus system to make it easily accessible for everyone,” said Anumita Roychowdhury, CSE’s executive director for research and advocacy. “And there has been virtually no effort to make paths for pedestrians or cyclists.”

Delhi’s battle with dirty air is complicated by its proximity to vital economic sectors such as agriculture that are also major sources of pollution. Neighboring Punjab and Haryana states, from where the farm fires emanate, are known as the bread baskets of India and critical to food security.

Although the government has made efforts to promote subsidized machines that get rid of crop fodder, many farmers still prefer to set the stubble ablaze, which they say is cheaper and quicker. A ban on crop burning is seldom enforced in states where farmers are a huge voting bloc.

In Punjab, the number of farm fires increased by nearly 20% over the last year, leading to a political blame game between the local government in Punjab and the federal government.

“There is no doubt over who has turned Delhi into a gas chamber,” Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav tweeted Wednesday.

Farmers in Punjab said it will take time for millions of small farmers to switch from the way in which they have been disposing of their crop stubble for decades.

“Sometimes farmers don’t have time to wait for planting the next crop, so burning is an easy solution,” said Puneet Singh, who farms a four-hectare spread in Punjab. “On the machine, you need two or three operations to deal with the rice straw, so it takes more time, and it is also more expensive. While educated ones now understand that burning stubble is not good for the ecosystem, many others feel it is not fair to blame their fires for the pollution in Delhi.”

He said he has used the machine that cuts the rice straw and sows wheat seeds and found it to be efficient.

Environmentalists point out that while much of the focus remains on pollution levels in the Indian capital, it is a problem that many other cities in the country confront.

Besides Delhi, much of North India also suffers from severe levels of air pollution.

“So far, clean air has not become an electoral issue in the country. Unless that happens, governments will not take the hard decisions that are needed to address the problem,” said Roychowdhury. “We need to focus a lot more on building awareness so that public demand for tackling air pollution builds up.”

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Ousted Pakistani Prime Minister Khan Shot, Injured

Imran Khan, the former prime minister of Pakistan, was shot and injured Thursday in an apparent assassination attempt while leading an anti-government march. Aisha Khalid narrates this report from VOA’s Urdu and Deewa services. Cameras: li Furqan, Salman Idrees, Muhammad Saqib, Khalil Ahmed, Malik Waqar Ahmad.

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Movies Return to Kashmir After 33 Years

The movies have returned to Indian-administered Kashmir after an absence of more than three decades.

A new multiplex cinema, INOX Srinagar, lit up its three screens for the first time on September 30, almost 33 years after all of the region’s theaters shut down in the face of a campaign by armed militants opposed to cinemas, beauty parlors and liquor shops.

Even today, the threat of violence remains high for the several dozen theatergoers who visit the multiplex each day, seeking a novel experience in the case of the younger generation or, in the case of their elders, a nostalgic reminder of times past.

Would-be patrons must pass through a tight security cordon, having their cars checked by a rifle-bearing policeman, and then being frisked at the main gate before entering the theater. An armored truck with at least a dozen policemen is stationed near the entry gate, and an elevated security tower stands next to the ticket counter.

The Kashmir Valley boasted some 15 movie theaters until 1989, when militants opposed to Indian rule in the region demanded their closure. All were shut down on January 1, 1990.

Some were turned into malls, some into hospitals, and some into bunkers now occupied by Indian paramilitary forces. Several, subjected to grenade or firebomb attacks, are nothing more than piles of bricks. A few short-lived attempts to reopen theaters since 1990 failed in the face of heavy security and militant threats.

None of that history has dampened the enthusiasm of INOX Srinagar owner Vikas Dhar, whose family has owned movie theaters in Srinagar since the 1960s. He told VOA that for him, the opening of his multiplex marks the realization of a dream.

So far attendance has been sparse, with a little more than 5,000 patrons visiting the 524-seat complex in its first month of operation. But Dhar is already looking ahead.

“It is not a big figure, but it will increase with the passage of time when people will come out of their houses without being afraid of anyone,” he said.

“We are planning to provide a wholesome entertainment for the entire family, and it requires more development,” Dhar continued. “The launch of multiplex is generating interest among people and will surely increase in the near future. We are also thinking of developing a play area for children and food court for the adults next year.”

A peek at the past

For Mahjabeen Ashai, a homemaker in her early 60s, a visit to the cinema brought back the past. “Though hard but I visited INOX Srinagar just to recollect memories of old times when I used to watch movies in halls with my husband,” she told VOA.

But for a younger generation of Kashmiris who have never visited a movie theater, there is the question of why they should put up with the security risks when they can enjoy the same films in their own homes on streaming video – commonly referred to in the region as OTT (Over The Top).

“I like watching stuff from the comfort of my home,” said Tayba Gulnar, a 27-year-old lawyer. “Almost all of us have big TV screens with OTT subscriptions at home. Cinema is a public place and is different from what it used to be 10-15 years ago.

“Why should I go to the cinema to watch a movie?” she asked. “I would only watch an animated movie in cinema, if I ever go there.”

But Dhar is convinced that even younger Kashmiris will learn to appreciate the unique experience of watching a film in a cinema. He said that movies such as “Avatar” and “Avengers” with their dramatic special effects can only be fully enjoyed on the big screen.

Dhar’s optimism is shared by Manmohan Singh Gauri, whose Palladium Cinema was perhaps the best-known theater in the region before shutting down with the others at the beginning of 1990. India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, was photographed shaking hands in front of the theater with Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah, then prime minister of Jammu and Kashmir, not long after independence from Britain.

Gauri told VOA that he hopes to open his own two-screen multiplex if he is granted permission by the government. He said he expects his bid could make a big impact, adding that the return of cinema to the valley can give younger Kashmiris access to more information about what is happening around the world.

Despite the strict security measures, the threat of violence remains a concern; just in the past week four militants were killed in twin encounters with Indian forces in Kashmir.

But Dhar said he is taking steps to keep his patrons safe. “At present we are running three to four shows in a day and don’t have any plans for late evening shows,” he said.

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Former Pakistan PM Khan Shot, Wounded at Protest March

Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan was wounded in an apparent assassination attempt Thursday while he was leading his ongoing anti-government march on Islamabad. 

Khan was hit by at least one bullet in his right leg, his aides said. 

The attack killed at least one person and injured several others, a senior leader of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party confirmed to reporters. 

Senator Faisal Javed, a close aide of Khan, is among those injured.    

Details are still coming in.

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Pakistan Floods Have Kept Over 2 Million Children from School, UN Says

The United Nations said Thursday the recent catastrophic floods in Pakistan have destroyed or damaged nearly 27,000 schools, preventing more than 2 million children in the country from returning to their education.

UNICEF said Thursday that more than two months after the devastating floods engulfed large areas of Pakistan, the tops of school buildings are just becoming visible in some calamity-hit districts and it could take months before the flood waters completely recede. 

“Almost overnight, millions of Pakistan’s children lost family members, homes, safety, and their education, under the most traumatic circumstances,” said Robert Jenkins, UNICEF’s global director of education, after visiting flood-ravaged areas.

“Now, faced with the uncertainty of when they’ll be able to return to school, and having already endured some of the world’s longest school closures due to the pandemic, they are experiencing yet another threat to their future,” Jenkins warned.  

The deluge, triggered by climate change-driven torrential monsoon seasonal rains, has affected 33 million people and killed more than 1,700 others across the country. Flood waters washed away at least 800,000 houses, killed 1.2 million crucial livestock animals and drenched 9.4 million acres of crop area, according to Pakistani and U.N. officials.  

UNICEF estimates more than 3.5 million childrens’ education has been interrupted due to floods all over Pakistan. It warns that the longer schools remain closed, the greater the risk of children dropping out of altogether, increasing their likelihood of being forced into child labor and exposure to other forms of abuse in the impoverished South Asian nation of about 220 million people.  

Pakistan already has the world’s second-highest number of out-of-school children with an estimated 22.8 million children aged 5 to 16 not attending school, representing 44% of the total population in that age group, according to UNICEF.

Many of the districts hit the worst by the flooding were already listed among Pakistan’s most vulnerable areas, where a third of boys and girls were already out of school, and 50% of children suffered from stunting.  

The U.N. agency noted Thursday that during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, schools across Pakistan were fully or partially closed for 64 weeks until they were reopened in March — some of the world’s longest school closures.

“Less than six months on, the destruction caused by the extreme floods means schoolchildren are once again locked out of learning. Excessive damage to infrastructure including electricity and internet connectivity has left remote learning largely inaccessible,” UNICEF said.

UNICEF says it has established more than 500 temporary learning centers in the worst-affected Pakistani districts, and supported teachers and children with education supplies. 

“For some children, who had never been enrolled in school before, these learning centers are their very first experience of education. We need to do all that we can to ensure they continue learning when they return to their homes,” Jenkins said.

Several districts of the hardest-hit southern Sindh province have remained underwater for nearly two months. 

In its latest flood review report, the U.N. has warned that winter is fast approaching and flood victims urgently need adequate shelter, as well as nonfood items, such as tents and blankets.

The report says public health concerns are high due to damaged infrastructure, the outbreak of waterborne diseases, stagnating water and inadequate sanitation facilities. The practice of open defecation has increased from one-fifth before the floods to over one-third of the affected population, with 6 million no longer having home sanitation facilities, the U.N. said.

 

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What America’s ‘Message Diplomat’ Told Central Asia

Democracy requires free and credible media. This was among the critical messages that U.S. Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Global Public Affairs Elizabeth Kennedy Trudeau delivered during a recent visit to Central Asia.

Trudeau visited Uzbekistan, Washington’s strategic partner, and Kyrgyzstan, which the Biden administration sees as “the light of freedom” in Central Asia despite continuing setbacks and a wave of recent detentions of activists and civil society figures.

In an interview with VOA, Trudeau said her time in the region was devoted largely to candid conversations with the leaders of governments and non-governmental representatives.

The situation looks “very different when you’re in Bishkek or Tashkent,” she acknowledged, “because the issues that citizens and governments face, you understand better when you actually can sit and talk.”

“In Uzbekistan, it was really focusing on [President Shavkat Mirziyoyev’s] reform agenda,” Trudeau said. “We also had very clear conversations on media freedom and the issue that’s not only facing Uzbekistan, but the United States — disinformation.

“We spoke very frankly about Russia’s unjust and unprovoked war in Ukraine, and we understand Uzbekistan’s view on that. We talked about their principled and non-aligned status on that,” she added. “We also talked about how we can deepen our partnership. Uzbekistan is a vitally important country for us.”

Frank conversations with Kyrgyzstan

Trudeau claims a strong relationship with neighboring Kyrgyzstan as well.

But even as Kyrgyz media quoted her calling this part of Central Asia “the light of media freedom,” supporters of the current regime were calling for the closure of media outlets that are critical of the government. October saw mass arrests of activists and bloggers.

“We’ve made our views known,” Trudeau said of those moves. “I think conversations like this need to be very frank. What we have said to our partners in the Kyrgyz Republic is that democracy is best served with a vigorous and open media.”

She still believes that Kyrgyzstan leads the way in media freedom in Central Asia, emphasizing continuous U.S. assistance.

“What we come back with whenever we go on trips is sort of a laundry list. … Here’s something they want to explore more in partnership with us. So, the onus also is on us to make sure that we meet those asks.”

‘A partnership of equals’

In Uzbekistan, along with officials and the non-governmental sector, Trudeau met with Saida Mirziyoyeva, the president’s eldest daughter, whose office highlighted in a statement that the U.S. official was not there “to preach.”

As one of the top diplomats responsible for promoting American values and communicating its priorities, Trudeau told VOA that “this is a partnership of equals” and that Washington does not have all the answers.

“When we sit around a table, we need to listen as much as we talk,” she said. “The U.S. needs to approach it with humility and understand that we have as much to learn as we do to share.”

Trudeau praised Mirziyoyeva for “her expertise and her passion for her country.”

“We talked about women’s rights and gender issues. We talked about the importance of media freedom. We had a great conversation on disinformation and how it impacts citizens in the U.S. as well as citizens in Uzbekistan. … There are no borders to disinformation. So, we need to address this collectively. How do we make sure our citizens have the tools they need to be able to identify it, to be able to get the facts?”

Usually, U.S. diplomats avoid engaging the family members of leaders, especially in regions such as Central Asia, where corruption and nepotism have deep roots.

But, Trudeau said, “I was very comfortable meeting [Mirziyoyeva] as head of her foundation, which is doing remarkable work not only on women’s rights, lifting women business owners, but also on media freedom. You know, this is someone who’s very passionate and very engaged on the subject. And I’d like to think the United States will always meet people who care about the issues as much as we do.”

When VOA asked whether the U.S. government sees Mirziyoyeva as a relevant person in the Uzbek political system, Trudeau’s answer was, “absolutely.”

Countering disinformation

How does the Biden administration envision working with Central Asian governments on countering Russian disinformation? These countries are still rated among the most closed societies, and democratic reforms, despite promises, have been slow to take hold.

The Kyrgyz government closed a TV station this year, accusing it of posting an anti-Russia video, while in Uzbekistan, authorities have been pressing media outlets to maintain “neutrality” by not publishing or airing anything questioning the Russian war in Ukraine. Uzbek journalists tell VOA that the government is not as restrictive on war coverage as it was at the beginning of the conflict, but they confirm widespread self-censorship.

“No one’s got an easy answer on this,” said Trudeau, acknowledging the challenges in fighting disinformation.

“We’re all seeing it. So, as we sat in Bishkek and Tashkent, we said, ‘What are you seeing? How is that impacting your average citizen? Where are they getting information? Who do they trust?’ And one thing we heard again and again is media literacy, making sure that people understand how they themselves as citizens can be armed to make those determinations on what’s true.”

Central Asian journalists and bloggers who met Trudeau appreciated the outreach but posed their own questions about the depth of the U.S. commitment: Will Washington follow up? What kind of support can the media community expect from Washington? Will there be more funding, more assistance and development programs?

What they will see, Trudeau said, “is continued consistent engagement being responsive to countries’ needs. …”

“As the information environment shifts, we need to collectively meet that demand, because journalism and media freedom are the front line of democracy,” she said. “This is a war space just as much as land, sea, and air. So, the question is ‘How are we arming ourselves to be able to adapt?’”

This article originated in VOA’s Uzbek Service.

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Activists Welcome India’s Ban on ‘Two-Finger’ Test on Rape Survivors

Advocacy groups are welcoming a decision by India’s Supreme Court that bans what is known as a “two-finger” test on rape survivors, calling it a patriarchal and invasive practice and ruling that anyone violating the directive will face misconduct charges.

Medical experts have used the test to determine whether a woman has engaged in regular sexual intercourse.

Calling the practice regressive and unscientific, a two-judge panel said, “the probative value of a woman’s testimony does not depend upon her sexual history. It is patriarchal and sexist to suggest that a woman cannot be believed when she states that she was raped, merely for the reason that she is sexually active.”

New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a statement, “The judgment brings hope that the justice system will finally stop using this unscientific process.”

In the past, the Supreme Court had “deprecated,” or voiced disapproval of, the use of the test in several orders, Justice DY Chandrachud, one of the two judges, noted.

“The so-called test has no scientific basis. It instead re-victimizes and re-traumatizes women and is an affront to their dignity. So, the two-finger or per vaginam test must not be conducted,” Chandrachud said.

“The test is based on an incorrect assumption that a sexually active woman cannot be raped. Nothing can be further from the truth — evidence of a victim’s sexual history is wholly immaterial while adjudicating whether the accused raped her. It is regrettable that it continues to be conducted even today.”

The bench made the observation while restoring conviction in a 2004 case of rape and murder of a woman in the eastern state of Jharkhand. On October 31, the Supreme Court overturned a ruling by the Jharkhand High Court acquitting a man — who had been previously convicted by a lower-level trial court in the state.

The Supreme Court asked the federal and state governments to ensure that the two-finger test is no longer conducted on rape survivors. The court ordered the Indian health ministry to conduct workshops for all health service providers across the country, in order to communicate the proper procedure to examine rape survivors and let them know that in no situation are they to conduct two-finger tests.

The court also ordered the health ministry to ensure that the chapter on two-finger tests is removed from the syllabus of medical education.

Since 2013, the Supreme Court has said the test and its interpretation violate the right of rape survivors to privacy, physical and mental integrity, and dignity. Indrajit Khandekar, a Maharashtra state-based activist and medical doctor, said this is the first time the court has banned it and attached punitive action on doctors found conducting the test.

Khandekar, a forensic expert, filed a public interest litigation in the Bombay High Court in 2010 seeking a ban on the test on the basis of a 258-page report that he prepared following his research on the use of the test.

The attachment of the provision of punishment in Monday’s ruling from the country’s highest court raises hopes the test will finally be eliminated, Khandekar said.

“The two-finger test or the virginity test is an unscientific, inhumane, derogatory, and discriminatory practice that violates a woman’s dignity,” Khandekar told VOA. “The test can be physically, psychologically, and socially devastating to girls or young women. Other people have no right to know whether or not a particular girl is a virgin.”

In several cases, the doctor’s opinion after conducting a two-finger test, and the assumption that a rape survivor had engaged in regular sexual activity, was used to cast a stigma on a young woman’s character, calling her one with bad morals, he said.

“As a result, one might wonder whether this is a trial for rape on a woman or a trial for the victim’s character. Even the insertion of the fingers into the vagina of a female without her consent is nothing but a second assault,” Khandekar said.

Medical doctor Ranjana Pardhi, who has long campaigned against the two-finger test, said that studies published in several medical journals show that the inspection of the hymen cannot give conclusive evidence of vaginal penetration or any other sexual history.

“Abnormal hymenal features such as a hymenal transection, laceration, enlarged opening, or scars are found in females with, as well as without, a history of sexual intercourse. Vaginal laxity and size of introitus [an opening] also is not an indicator of sexual intercourse. There are some other tests to confirm sexual intercourse or penetration,” Nagpur-based Pardhi told VOA.

“The so-called virginity test or two-finger test is medically flawed.”

Pardhi added that activists campaigning against the test are hopeful that their long fight is going to bear fruit but warned that without enforcement, it might not be successful

“We also hope that the law enforcement agencies and the judiciary will strictly penalize the medical professionals for noncompliance. Otherwise, the ban will remain unimplementable and meaningless,” she said.

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China Urges Pakistan to Ensure Security of Chinese Working on Bilateral Projects

Chinese President Xi Jinping hosted wide-ranging bilateral talks on Wednesday with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and “expressed his great concern” about the security of Chinese nationals in the long-time South Asian allied country.

Sharif visited Beijing for the first time since assuming office in April. He was one of the first foreign leaders to meet Xi after the Chinese leader secured a historic third term in office last month.

Officials said Xi and Sharif reviewed bilateral cooperation and reaffirmed their commitment to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a Chinese-funded multibillion dollar bilateral project designed to help Islamabad upgrade and expand its economy.

“President Xi expressed his great concern about the safety of Chinese nationals in Pakistan and conveyed his hope that Pakistan will provide a reliable and safe environment for Chinese institutions and personnel working on cooperation projects there,” a Chinese Foreign Ministry statement said.

Thousands of Chinese are working on CPEC projects, but growing militant attacks against the foreigners, particularly in the turbulent southwestern Baluchistan province, have alarmed Beijing and led to a slowdown on some of the projects in recent months.

The latest attack took place in April when a female suicide bomber killed three Chinese teachers along with their local driver in the southern port city of Karachi, threatening to derail the CPEC undertaking and strain bilateral ties.

“Pakistan will further step up security measures and do all it can to protect the safety of Chinese institutions and personnel,” said the Chinese statement, quoting Sharif.

Ethnic Baluch insurgents took credit for plotting the Karachi attack as they’ve done for other raids on Chinese nationals. The insurgents claim to be fighting for an independent Baluchistan and denounce CPEC projects in the natural resources-rich region, alleging the projects are meant to deprive local residents of their resources.

China has invested nearly $25 billion over the past seven years in large-scale infrastructure development projects in Pakistan under its flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which seeks to link China with the rest of the world through new roads, rail and sea routes. Both countries say the investment has created more than 70,000 direct jobs and has effectively addressed Pakistan’s energy crisis.

Xi told Sharif on Wednesday that Beijing will continue to work with Islamabad to help address its economic challenges.

Pakistan has long struggled with a balance of payments crisis in the wake of dwindling foreign exchange reserves. Severe floods this summer have added to the challenges facing the nascent Sharif administration, causing an estimated $30 billion or more in losses across the impoverished country.

The central banks of the two countries Wednesday also signed a memorandum of understanding “on establishing RMB [Chinese currency] clearing arrangement in Pakistan,” an official announcement said. It added that the deal “will further boost usage of RMB for cross-border transactions among Chinese and Pakistani enterprises and financial institutions. This will also promote bilateral trade and investment between the two countries.”

The statement continued without elaboration that “President Xi pointed out that the world, our times and history are changing in ways like never before. Facing a highly uncertain world, both sides should stand on the right side of history.”

Sharif’s office said Xi also pledged an additional assistance package of nearly $69 million to support Pakistan’s relief and rehabilitation efforts in flood-hit areas.

ML-1 upgrading

The Chinese leader stressed in his meeting with Sharif the need for the two countries to “work together to create conditions for the early implementation” of the Main Line-1 (ML-1) high-speed railway improvement project under the CPEC framework.

Pakistani officials estimate that upgrading the 1,872-kilometer colonial-era railway track between Karachi and the northwestern city of Peshawar will cost nearly $10 billion. Sharif’s office described the ML-1 as “a project of strategic importance” and said both sides “would make joint efforts for launching” it.

CPEC has built the deep-water strategic Gwadar Port in Baluchistan that gives Beijing international trade access to the Arabian Sea.

“It is important to accelerate the construction of auxiliary infrastructure for Gwadar Port to unleash its role in driving interconnected development in the region,” Xi said.

The United States has been critical of CPEC and BRI, calling them “debt diplomacy” or a “debt trap” to make developing countries increasingly rely on China.

The International Monetary Fund reported in September that about 30% of Islamabad’s foreign debt is owed to Beijing.

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Indian Kashmir Witnessing Rise in Wild Animal Attacks

Fourteen-year-old Shahid Ahmad Ganai took his family’s cows for grazing some 200 meters away from his house in Trikanjan, a hilly terrain on the Indian side of Kashmir.  

But that Sunday afternoon was interrupted with sudden screams. His father, Abdul Jabbar Ganai, 52, and mother, Parveena Begum, 47, frantically ran towards the grazing spot in the remote Boniyar village neighborhood of Baramulla district.  

“We rushed toward the spot and saw our youngest son, Shakir, rushing toward us in a state of shock,” said Ganai, describing what happened on June 12. “He [Shakir] told us that Shahid was attacked by a leopard. Both of us ran as fast as we could to save our son, but all in vain,” the distraught father said while pointing towards the site. 

Located in the foothills of the Himalayas on the Indian side of Kashmir, the region has about 24,214 square kilometers of forest land constituting around 20% of its total geographical area, including five national parks, 14 wildlife sanctuaries and 35 conservation reserves, official figures show. 

The region’s forests host several types of wildlife including leopards, bears and wild boars. Humans and animals rarely used to cross each other’s paths but in the past two decades, wildlife experts say the “frequency of interactions” between the two has increased. 

Data provided by the local wildlife department claims some 234 people have been killed and 2,918 others injured from January 2006 to November 2021 due to man-wildlife conflict across the Kashmir region.  

Five leopards and 17 bears were killed after being declared “man-eaters” under subsection [6] of section 11 of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 of India since 2011. 

The mutilated body of Shahid was found deep inside the forest by locals accompanied by police and wildlife officials. The same leopard is said to have struck in another village of Boniyar just two days later on June 14. 

The leopard mauled a 12-year-old girl identified as Rutba Manzoor when she was playing outside her house. Manzoor’s family refused VOA’s request for comment, with one of the family members saying that they don’t want to relive the tragedy and are removing themselves from “anything that disturbs our mental peace.” 

In just four months, Ganai said five children and more than 50 sheep were killed by the leopard in 11 encounters, leading the residents of Boniyar to hit the streets asking for Jammu and Kashmir Wildlife Department to hunt the animal down. 

“Locals, police and wildlife officials killed the leopard after several days of search,” Ganai said. “Many lives would have been saved had wildlife officials issued an order to kill the leopard soon after the first incident,” the grieving father added. 

Man-animal conflict factors  

Mehreen Khaleel, a primatologist and head of Wildlife Research Conservation Foundation, or WRCF, a Kashmir-based NGO, says the interaction between humans and animals in the Kashmir valley has increased in the last two decades, but notes there are additional factors for such conflicts. 

“We don’t have enough data to support the cause of these increased interactions. Non availability of prey, increased disturbance in wild habitats, change in land use patterns in fringe zones are a possible few of the reasons,” Khaleel said. “The large-scale shift from agriculture to horticulture in fringe zones, reduction of escape spaces, closure of natural animal corridors has increased the occurrence,” she said, adding that climate change also has played a greater role considering the geographic location of the Kashmir region. 

Man-animal conflict in the Kashmir valley is not only confined to the areas closer to forests. The presence of wild animals such as bears, porcupines and leopards have been found in many parts of central Kashmir. 

In September, a female bear and her cub were caught by a joint team of police and wildlife department officials from Rajbagh neighborhood of Srinagar city after their movement was spotted inside a posh residential area with the help of CCTV cameras. 

On June 4, 2021, Adha Shakil, a 6-year-old girl, was playing with her doll inside the lawn of her two-story house in the Ompora area of central Kashmir’s Budgam district when a leopard attacked her and took her to a nearby forest nursery. 

“Everything happened in a matter of a few seconds,” the victim’s grandfather, Ghulam Hassan Mir, told VOA. “She just screamed, and I came out running to see what happened to her. She was missing and the doll she was carrying in her hands was lying on the ground. I immediately figured out that it was a leopard attack and Adha won’t return alive.” 

Mir said rumors about the presence of the leopard inside the area had been heard for over two years.  

“Today people are scared that the incident might repeat in [the] future,” Mir said. “It seems that there is no value for a human life in Kashmir, otherwise the government would have ordered for the conversion of a forest nursery into a park,” he said, adding the forest department cut a few trees, which according to him is not enough to create safety for people. 

“Thousands of people consisting of civilians, army, police and wildlife officials,” Mir said, failed to trace the dead body of his granddaughter until the next afternoon.  

“One needs to understand how dense this forest nursery is,” he said. “Moreover, people are claiming that one more leopard is present inside it [the forest] as many local residents claim have found fresh footprints of the wild animal. Government will act only after another fatal incident.” 

Aliya Mir, a wildlife rescuer associated with Wildlife SOS, disagrees that human-animal conflict has increased, saying instead that the reporting of such incidents has increased.  

“There was a communication gap between people and the wildlife department due to which such incidents did not use to come into the notice,” Aliya told VOA. “Bridging the gap between the people and the wildlife department has reduced casualties, as the department has set control rooms in every district to address emergency and rescue calls.” 

Long-term impact 

Lying on a torn mattress, inside a dark room of his single-story mud and brick house, Mohammad Yousf Kohli, 70, cannot walk without underarm crutches as one of his feet was damaged completely following a bear attack near a grazing area in Check-Dard-Khor, a remote village in district Srinagar. 

“I was sitting watching my sheep grazing and all of sudden a giant bear came out of bushes and attacked me,” Kohli said, adding his pet dog saved his life by attacking the bear. “For three days I remained unconscious inside the hospital. I received injuries on my head, neck, arms and foot.” 

Kholi told VOA that his family suffered financially as the money earned in the last five years was spent on his treatment.  

“We have nothing left at our home. The incident made our financial condition from bad to worse,” he said, adding that he did not receive compensation from the government. “I used to support my family but now I have become their liability.” 

There are frequent bear attacks in Check-Dard-Khor, Kholi says, as people spot them regularly especially during evening hours.  

“People are scared to move out in the evening,” he said. “Most of the families living in our area have purchased dogs so that they can have an idea about the presence of wild animals roaming here.”

Compensation for victims 

Rashid Naqash, Kashmir zone wildlife officer, told VOA that his department is doing everything it can to prevent man-animal conflict. He says wildlife officials regularly conduct awareness programs in attack-prone areas. 

Naqash says the government provides rupees three lakh ($3,645) as compensation to the families of the slain victims and people with serious injuries.  

“Besides the compensation, we have deposited rupees one crore ($16,4059) at the state-run hospital, Sher e Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, for the treatment of the injured people,” he said. 

But families of victims say the compensation is often delayed. Ganai’s family says they have yet to receive any money five months after the tragedy. 

“I plan to construct a new house which will have basic facilities such as an internal washroom,” Ganai, the father, said. “Our area is prone to leopard attacks, and we are scared to go to the washroom in the evening or at night as we have to cover a lot of distance. I, being a poor man, can’t afford to do anything without money. My only hope is the compensation amount and I need it immediately to secure the lives of my family members.” 

Naqash told VOA that the Kashmir zone wildlife department usually gives out money based on priority, but in some cases, it takes some time due to technical issues.  

“Everyone will get compensation soon. Jammu and Kashmir Wildlife Department is committed to its promises,” he said. 

Khaleel, the primatologist, believes there will be a spike in man-animal interactions in the coming years as animals are losing their habitats as well as their prey. Additionally, she warned, an “increase in population of invasive species such as wild-boar and porcupine” might exacerbate the existing problem and she recommended that “it needs to be managed at the earliest.”  

 

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US Afghan Auditor Decries Non-Cooperation by Biden Administration

A U.S. government agency Wednesday criticized President Joe Biden’s administration for blocking it from fully assessing about $1.1 billion in U.S. humanitarian aid to Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover in August 2021.

The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, or SIGAR, said in its quarterly report that Washington remains the single largest donor to the war-torn South Asian country.

The agency has been reviewing U.S. agencies’ programs in Afghanistan for more than a decade and has been critical of U.S. wasteful spending in the country.

“SIGAR, for the first time in its history, is unable this quarter to provide Congress and the American people with a full accounting of this U.S. government spending due to the non-cooperation of U.S. agencies,” the report said.

“The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which administers the vast majority of current U.S. funding for Afghanistan, and the Treasury Department, refused to cooperate with SIGAR in any capacity.” The State Department “was selective in the information it provided … sharing funding data but not details of agency-supported programs,” the report asserted.

Lack of cooperation was “in direct violation” of the 2008 law that created SIGAR, the report said, adding that some agencies rebuffed the auditor for months.

USAID and the State Department said in response to SIGAR data requests that the current U.S. programming in Afghanistan is “humanitarian and development assistance” and “unrelated to reconstruction activities.”

 

“SIGAR rejects this claim, noting that there is little to no substantive difference between assistance referred to as ‘reconstruction’ and assistance referred to as ‘development’ or “humanitarian,” the report said.

The quarterly report has presented a somber picture of Afghanistan since U.S.-led NATO troops withdrew from the country last year after two decades of war with the then-insurgent Islamist Taliban. It concluded that “current conditions are similar to those under the Taliban in the 1990s.”

The Afghan economy contracted by an estimated 20% since August 2021, while potentially having lost as many as 700,000 jobs and more than of half of Afghanistan’s population (an estimated 24.4 million Afghans) are in need of humanitarian assistance, according to SIGAR.

The report said the Taliban had largely reversed U.S.-backed years of efforts to promote Afghan human rights and independent local media, programs that cost USAID at least $220 million.

SIGAR cited United Nations estimates that more than 3 million girls who previously attended secondary school have been denied their right to access education in the year since the Taliban took power. The ongoing ban on girls’ secondary education may end up costing the Afghan economy up to $5.4 billion in lifetime earnings potential, it warned.

The U.S. agency said the country had lost almost 40% of its media outlets and 60% of its journalists since the Islamist group seized power, citing Reporters Without Borders’ findings last August. Reporters Without Borders is a media advocacy organization widely known as RSF for the French abbreviation of its name.

“Since August 2021, the Afghan media sector has mostly collapsed under the weight of the Taliban’s restrictions and censorship,” the report said.

No country has yet recognized the Taliban administration. The United States and allied nations suspended international financial assistance to Afghanistan and imposed banking sector sanctions immediately after the Islamist group seized power. The measures have pushed the Afghan economy to the brink of collapse and caused an already bad humanitarian crisis in the country to deteriorate.

The Biden administration, however, has since facilitated the flow of humanitarian assistance for the Afghan people and eased some of the banking sector-related sanctions.

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