Afghanistan Taliban highlights today: China backs Taliban’s demand to US to unfreeze Afghanistan’s assets
A month after grabbing Kabul, the Taliban faced a frightening problem when they tried to change the victory of their lightning military into a long-lasting peaceful period.
After four decades of war and tens of thousands of people, the security of most increased, but the Afghan economy was in the ruins even though hundreds of billions of dollars in development expenditure over the past 20 years. While a lot of attention in the West has focused on whether the new Taliban government will keep promises to protect women’s rights or offer protection to militant groups such as Al Qaeda, for many Afghans, the main priority is survival.
US President Joe Biden’s top cabinet member did not succeed in trying to prevent him from pulling all US troops from Afghanistan, hoping he would take care of withdrawals to seek political settlement, said a new book.
The State Secretary of Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was encouraged to Drawdown which was slower to encourage negotiations between the Taliban and Afghanistan governments, according to “danger,” a book that will come by Journalist Famous Investigation Bob Woodward Robert Costa Robert Costa. .
Blinken, old aide for Biden who had previously repeated his plan to end the 20-year war, called President Brussels after hearing concerns from Minister NATO in the March meeting, as reported by Agence France Presse.
“The new recommendation is to extend the mission with US forces for a while to see if it can produce political settlement. Buy time for negotiations,” he said, according to a part published by CNN ahead of the book release next week.
Month since running away from the Taliban, Afghan Refugees Sikh is uncertain about the future
Baldeep Singh, an Afghan Sikh, who fled to India after Afghanistan fell to the Taliban, knew three languages, including Hindi and French, but had difficulty finding work to feed his family.
This is a case not only with Sikh who arrived in the midst of the fall of the Taliban on August 15, but also those who left the country before, said the 24-year-old player, who currently lives in New Mahavir in New Mahavir Nagar.
About 73 Sikh Afghanistan came to India since the Taliban State takeover. Some families have gone for Punjab where they have relatives. What in Delhi relies on assistance from Gurdwara Teacher Arjan Dev in New Mahavir Nagar, PTI reported. At least six such family had lived in Gurdwara because they finished their compulsory quarantine period in the ITBP facility in the Chhawla area.
Amarjit Singh, 45, is between 49 Afghan Sikh who flew to Delhi from Kabul through Dushanbe on Air India flights last month. He has installed Gurdwara along with his wife and five of his children, one of them three months old. “The Taliban does not care about his own people, forget about Sikh. You don’t know what these people do,” he said.
Iran continues commercial flights to Afghanistan
Wednesday Iran continued commercial flights to Afghanistan which had been stopped after the Taliban considered strength, the news agency reported. The Fars Semiofficial news agency reported that passengers returned by the Charter returned from Tehran to Kabul. It was said to be the second flight from the Eastern City of Mashhad which was left for Kabul too.
Meanwhile, the Afghan Civil Service Ministry has approached Pakistan with a request to allow these two airlines to continue commercial flight operations between the two countries.
The airline and transportation of Afghanistan, in a letter to the Pakistani civil aviation authority (CAA), asked him to allow the operation of Ariana Afghan Airlines and water based on bilateral understanding, which was reported by the newspaper, which was claimed to have a copy of the letter on September 13.