Tag: Afghanistan

  • Powerful earthquakes kill over 100 in Afghanistan

    Powerful earthquakes kill over 100 in Afghanistan

    Two 6.3 magnitude earthquakes killed dozens of people in western Afghanistan yesterday, the country’s national disaster authority said.

    The United Nations gave a preliminary figure of 320 dead, but later said the figure was still being verified. Local authorities gave an estimate of 100 people killed and 500 injured, according to the same update from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

    Mohammad Abdullah Jan said four villages in the Zenda Jan district in Herat province bore the brunt of the quakes and aftershocks. Dozens of houses have been damaged.

    The United States Geological Survey reported the 6.3 magnitude tremblors. It said the epicenter was 40 kilometers (24.8 miles) northwest of Herat city. There was an aftershock with a 5.5 magnitude.

    A map on the USGS website indicates seven earthquakes in the area. At least five powerful earthquakes struck the city around noon, Herat city resident Abdul Shakor Samadi said.

    “All people are out of their homes,” Samadi said. “Houses, offices and shops are all empty and there are fears of more earthquakes. My family and I were inside our home, I felt the quake.” His family began shouting and ran outside, afraid to return indoors.

    The World Health Organization in Afghanistan said it dispatched 12 ambulance cars to Zenda Jan to evacuate casualties to hospitals.

    Read Also: UN considers halting Afghanistan mission after  ban for working women

    “As deaths & casualties from the earthquake continue to be reported, teams are in hospitals assisting treatment of wounded & assessing additional needs,” the U.N. agency said on X, formerly known as Twitter. “WHO-supported ambulances are transporting those affected, most of them women and children.”

    Telephone connections went down in Herat, making it hard to get details from affected areas. Videos on social media showed hundreds of people in the streets outside their homes and offices in Herat city.

    Herat province borders Iran. The quake also was felt in the nearby Afghan provinces of Farah and Badghis, according to local media reports.

    Abdul Ghani Baradar, the Taliban-appointed deputy prime minister for economic affairs, expressed his condolences to the dead and injured in Herat and Badghis.

    The Taliban urged local organizations to reach earthquake-hit areas as soon as possible to help take the injured to hospital, provide shelter for the homeless, and deliver food to survivors. They said security agencies should use all their resources and facilities to rescue people trapped under debris.

    “We ask our wealthy compatriots to give any possible cooperation and help to our afflicted brothers,” the Taliban said on X.

    In June 2022, a powerful earthquake struck a rugged, mountainous region of eastern Afghanistan, flattening stone and mud-brick homes. The quake was Afghanistan’s deadliest in two decades, killing at least 1,000 people and injuring about 1,500.

  • Taliban attack kills 25 soldiers in western Afghanistan

    A Taliban attack killed 25 soldiers in western Afghanistan, an official confirmed on Monday.

    Defying Afghan government’s calls for truce during the holy month of Ramadan, the Taliban assaulted a military check post in the western Farah province bordering Iran.

    Shah Mehmood Naimi, deputy chairman of the provincial assembly, told Anadolu Agency that scores of Taliban insurgents stormed a military compound in an overnight attack on the main highway linking Herat and Kandahar provinces.

    He confirmed the death toll of the attack that began Sunday night and continued till early Monday morning.

    The Taliban took responsibility for the deadly attack.

    Qari Yosuf Ahmadi, the Taliban spokesman, said in a statement that a military check post was completely overrun in Gulistan district on the main highway.

    He claimed a large number of weapons and equipment were seized and two soldiers were taken captive.

    Read Also: India rejects Trump’s ‘sermons’ on Afghanistan

    A day earlier, at least 13 security forces were killed in a Taliban assault on a police headquarters in Baghlan province. Eight insurgents were also killed in the attack.

    The attacks came despite President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani’s call for peace and reconciliation during the month of Ramadan.

    “I once again call on the Taliban to respect this holy month and address the demand of Afghans for peace and reconciliation which was reflected at the Loya Jirga (grand consultative council of elders) for peace,” he said.

    The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan also urged all parties to the conflict to halt the fighting.

     

    www.aa.com.tr

  • Cyclone in Africa: Going to Afghanistan

    In 1984, when we all stood in awe of Decree Four, to differ from officialdom as represented by Nigeria’s military junta headed by Muhammadu Buhari was a perilous path to perdition. The soldiers brooked no dissent as they waved the draconian law before all, notably newsmen. The law, the most outrageous and pernicious by any military dictator in Nigeria, forbade reporters from publishing or broadcasting what the authorities ‘’calculated to bring the Federal Military Government or the government of a state or a public officer to ridicule or disrepute.’’

    Then this scary one: The martial ruler was given the power to prohibit the circulation of an ‘’offending ‘’ newspaper for one year. He was also at liberty to revoke the licence granted any broadcast medium or order its closure or forfeiture to the government if he was satisfied that its untrammelled existence was ‘’detrimental to the interest of the federation’’ or any part of the country. Still more frightening and utterly alien to jurisprudential convention, this: ‘’the burden of proving…the charge is true…shall, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any enactment or rule of law, lie on the person charged.’’ There was no escape if this law caught up with you.

    One of the two journalists of The Guardian newspaper jailed under Decree 4 Tunde Thompson would later write in his book, Power and the Press: ‘’…those charged under the decree were first to be regarded as guilty and to prove they were not, whatever the odds against them.’’

    Thereafter journalists were shy to write on local issues. You didn’t know when Buhari’s Procrustean-bed law could make you lie in it, regardless of your size. It was an elastic contraption that took in everyone, fat, skinny, tall or short, or averagely formed.

    So, Nigerian journalists, columnists especially, would opt for far-flung foreign events. And the Soviet and US proxy war in Afghanistan was the talk of the day. The writers suddenly became experts in global conflict resolution, leaving the larger domestic challenges unattended to. Their own home was on fire; but what sweet relief they got on flights away from hell. If you wrote on such issues in order to dodge the radar of the military, you were said to have gone Afghanistan.

    I also want to go Afghanistan today. Not because home issues are too hot to handle. No. I think running from them would keep them hot and make them hotter. But then we need to discuss something close home: the visit of a devastating cyclone to Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi last week.

    It’s a week after Cyclone Idai struck Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi, all in Southern Africa, leaving hundreds confirmed dead and levelling communities and sending hundreds of thousands into refugee camps. A Mozambican government spokesman declared that human casualties could go up with the records indicating that 15000 persons are missing. Even the military struggle waged to liberate Mozambique and Zimbabwe did not throw up such statistics of fatalities and destruction at a go. But this did.

    There are also security and grave health concerns. Those displaced are diseased and hungry and revolting. There are food and fuel shortages in the three countries. The United Nations World Food Programme coordinating food flights says it needs to sustain supplies over the next three months to stabilize the situation in Zimbabwe. In Mozambique where Idai began its march of death, the director of a Christian charity has warned Africans to prepare for a long recovery. “This is a catastrophe,’’ Edgar Jone of Tearfund, a charity body laments. He adds: ‘’Cyclone Idai has destroyed so much in an instance and it will years for people to recover what they have lost.’’ And a couple of international aid agencies have sent an SOS saying they are ‘’racing against time’’ to rescue the perishing, because they can’t reach survivors trapped in areas of Mozambique, where some villages are buried in floods.

    We should not be consoled by the flood of aid stuff and messages from African leaders commiserating with their counterparts in Southern Africa. Nor should we be unduly stirred by the presence of US military teams joining the cyclone rescue effort in Mozambique.

    We should be more elated to see African nations and the African Union with the other regional bodies on the continent rise to the occasion to supply the needed succour to our brothers and sisters in the afflicted areas. Agreed this is an international humanitarian crisis brought about by nature, requiring all humanity to come together to battle. But our leaders go to sleep, and expect the outside world to seize the initiative from them.

    It is a disease of lethargy that has bedevilled our leaders continent-wide. Even Cyclone Idai we are all demonizing didn’t spring on us. For instance, BBC’s reporters Jack Goodman and Christopher Giles have quoted the Zimbabwe Minister of Defence Oppah Muchinguri as saying her government was alerted by the meteorologists on the imminence of Idai and its route, but the authorities ‘’failed to anticipate its strength’’, and that undermined the level of preparations for evacuation of those in the trajectory of the cyclone.

    That is what we are saddled with in Africa. Our governments are not anchored on vision that looks into the next century. They live to exhaust the perks of office of the moment. Our town planning strategies are for urban centres that don’t see beyond five years or so. We are compromised such that we approve buildings put together that wouldn’t withstand sharply inclement weather.

    Years ago while shooting a documentary in Delta State, I was stupefied at the shapely sight of the General Hospital, Ugheli. There were no cracks. Our guide told me it had been in that pristine state over the decades. The plaque corroborated him: it was built in the days of Obafemi Awolowo, first premier of the old sprawling Western Nigeria that stretched from Ikeja to the banks of the Niger. The hospital block and wards with the steel beds were as though they were commissioned yesterday by Awolowo.

    Only leaders with an agenda set for the next century and beyond deliver a citizenry and monuments that stand against the treacherous elements of mis-governance and nature.

  • It’s a new dawn for cricket in Nigeria, says NCF boss

    The feat achieved by the Nigeria’s U-19 cricket tea at the just concluded ICC U-19 Cricket World Cup Africa Qualifiers in Namibia has been described as a new dawn for the sport in the country as the Sylvester Okpe-captained side became the first Nigeria team to qualify for a cricket World Cup.

    After emerging the overall winner at the six-nation qualifiers held in Namibia following their unbeaten run in the competition, Nigeria became the first team from the continental championship to join top playing cricket nations like Pakistan, South Africa, Afghanistan, Australia, India, England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, West Indies, Zimbabwe and host – South Africa as teams that had already booked their places at the global championship holding in 2020.

    An excited President of the Nigeria Cricket Federation (NCF), Professor Yahaha Ukwenya described the feat as a new dawn for the sport. “As a President, it is great and incredible and I cannot believe the boys have done this. We trained them to be true Nigerians, tough in character and spirit and not giving to anybody and to tell everybody that we are Africa’s largest nation and some of the toughest human beings from the continent are from Nigeria and they played that way. But we had no idea that they will get this far and by match by match, they fought and came out victorious,” Ukwenya said.

    For the coach of the team, Uthe Ogbimi, the feat did not come on a platter of gold. “It has been a long trek coming all the way from last year to qualify from the division two to division one and to come to division one and clear everybody is indeed so massive in our heart. We want to thank the federation for allowing us to go to Zimbabwe for a playing tour against strong opposition and it indeed lifted the game of the players. I think Nigeria should celebrate and corporate bodies should rally round the team to support us for the World Cup.”

    An elated Okpe said: “We had a little up and down in the game and we must thank God for the success here in Namibia. This qualification means a lot to me and it is the best moment in my life since I started playing cricket particularly to be part of the first Nigeria team to qualify for any cricket World Cup. We will go back to drawing to check our mistakes and correct it before the World Cup.”

  • Dozens of Afghan soldiers killed in attack on base

    The attack in Chinartu district on Aug. 3, underlined the ferocity of fighting in many areas of Afghanistan even as speculation has increased about a possible ceasefire during the Eid holiday later this month.

    “We have discovered and transported 40 bodies from the area, so far,” district governor Faiz Mohammad said, adding that a number of security forces were still missing.

    Read Also: Attacks: Zamfara records more IDPs

    News of the attack only began filtering out over the past two days.

    Muhammad Radmanish, a spokesman for the ministry of defence, said 27 Afghan soldiers were killed and five wounded.

    The base was back under control of security forces, said Radmanish but the attack has caused significant damage and weapons losses.

    Amir Muhammad Barekzai, a member of the provincial council, said some soldiers appear to have been shot after they were captured but it was not possible to obtain independent confirmation.

    No comment was immediately available from a Taliban spokesman.

    “By Wednesday evening, the bodies of 27 soldiers were discovered, but a number of others are still missing,’’ Barekzai said.

    The attack underlines the heavy losses still being suffered by security forces as they fight the Taliban insurgents.

    A report in 2017 by SIGAR, a U.S. Congressional watchdog, said the losses were “shockingly high’’ but Afghan authorities no longer release overall casualty data.

    The Taliban are fighting the Western-backed government to restore their version of sharia, or Islamic law, after they were driven out by U.S.-led forces in 2001.

  • 15 killed, 50 injured in Afghan mosque explosions

    At least 15 people were killed and more than 50 others wounded after two explosions ripped through a mosque in Gardez, a town in eastern Afghanistan on Friday, sources said.

    The incident occurred at around 1:30 p.m. local time when people were offering Friday prayers inside Imam-i Zaman Mosque in Police District II of the city, which is the capital of eastern Paktia province, a police officer who declined to be named, told Xinhua.

    Read Also: How Fed Govt tackling security challenges, by defence minister

    “The preliminary information and initial findings of our police showed that two back to back blasts struck inside the building when people were inside the mosque.

    “So far, we have no more details but the number of casualties may change as the victims were shifted to different hospitals across the city,” he said.

    Security forces have cordoned off the area for precautionary measures in Khowja Hassan neighbourhood mostly dominated by Shiite Afghans.

    Media and people were not allowed to enter the site and no one knows what exactly is ongoing inside the building.

    No group has claimed responsibility for the attack yet.

  • Suicide bomber hits Shi’ite area of Afghanistan, killing seven

    Suicide bomber hits Shi’ite area of Afghanistan, killing seven

    Officials said a suicide bomber blew himself up in, Kabul, Afghanistan, on Friday, killing seven people in an attack apparently intended to hit crowds gathered to commemorate a political leader from the mainly Shi’ite Hazara minority.

    Nasrat Rahimi, a deputy interior ministry spokesman, said one policeman and six civilians were killed and seven civilians wounded when the bomber was stopped at a security checkpoint.

    He said the bomber appeared to have intended to attack crowds gathered for the anniversary celebrations of the death of Abdul Ali Mazari, a Hazara political leader killed by the Taliban in 1995.

    A string of attacks on Shi’ite mosques and Hazara gatherings has been claimed by an affiliate of Islamic State, although many Afghan and Western security officials say they doubt the group works alone.

    In December, dozens of people were killed in a suicide attack on a Shi’ite cultural center claimed by Islamic State and two months earlier two separate mosque attacks killed at least 72 people.

    The attack came less than two weeks after President Ashraf Ghani called on the Taliban to join peace talks to end more than 16 years of the latest phase of Afghan war.

    Reuters/NAN

  • 30 killed in Afghan hotel attack

    30 killed in Afghan hotel attack

    An Afghanistan government official on Monday said death toll in Saturday’s attack on the Kabul Intercontinental Hotel has reached 30.

    Gunmen in army uniforms had stormed and battled Afghan Special Forces through the night on Saturday at the hotel.

    Wahid Majroh, a spokesman for the ministry of public health, however said the final toll of dead and wounded may still be higher.

    Majroh said 19 bodies had been brought into city hospitals, with six identified as foreigners.

    However, a senior Afghan security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to talk to the media, said the death toll was over 30 and might climb higher.

    The dead included hotel staff and guests, as well as members of the security forces who fought the attackers.

    Interior ministry spokesman Najib Danesh said all five attackers were also killed.

    In Kiev, Ukrainian foreign minister Pavlo Klimkin said on Twitter that six Ukrainians were killed in the attack.

    The raid was the latest in a series of attacks which have underlined the city’s vulnerability and the ability of militants to mount high-profile operations aimed at undermining confidence in the Western-backed government.

    Read Also: 30 killed in Kabul hospital attack

    No fewer than 150 guests were able to flee as parts of the building caught fire, with some shimmying down sheets tied together and dropped from upper-floor windows and others rescued by Afghan forces.

    Local airline Kam Air said around 40 of its pilots and air crew, many of whom are foreigners, were staying in the hotel and as many as 10 had been killed.

    Local media reports said the dead included Venezuelans and Ukrainians.

    Zamari Kamgar, the airline’s deputy director, said it was still trying to locate staff.

    The Taliban, which attacked the same hotel in 2011, claimed responsibility for the attack through spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid in a statement.

    A statement from the interior ministry put the blame on the Haqqani network, a group affiliated with the Taliban that is notorious for its attacks on urban targets.

    Abdul Naseri, a guest who was at the hotel for a conference, was in the hall of the hotel when he saw four gunmen dressed in army uniforms.

    Naseri said: “They were shouting in Pashto (language), ‘Don’t leave any of them alive, good or bad’. ‘Shoot and kill them all,’ one of them shouted.

    “I ran to my room on the second floor. I opened the window and tried to get out using a tree but the branch broke and I fell to the ground. I hurt my back and broke a leg.”

    Even after officials said the attack was over, sporadic gunshots and explosions could be heard from the site.

    As day broke on Sunday, thick clouds of black smoke poured from the building, an imposing 1960s structure set on a hilltop and heavily protected like most public buildings in Kabul.

    The Intercontinental is one of two main luxury hotels in the city and had been due to host an information technology conference on Sunday.

    No fewer than 100 IT managers and engineers were on site when the attack took place, said Ahmad Waheed, an official at the telecommunications ministry.

    Danesh said a private company had taken over responsibility for security at the hotel three weeks ago and there would be an investigation into possible failings.

    The attack came just days after a U.S. embassy warning of possible attacks on hotels in Kabul.

    Several armored U.S. military vehicles with heavy machine guns could be seen close to the hotel along with Afghan police units as Special Forces maneuvered around the site.

    Hotel manager Ahmad Haris Nayab, who escaped unhurt, said the attackers had got into the main part of the hotel through a kitchen before going through the hotel, with many guests trapped in their rooms.

    The senior security official said that the attackers had moved directly from the first floor to the fourth and fifth floors, suggesting the attack had been carefully prepared, possibly with inside help.

    “When the sixth floor caught fire this morning, my roommate told me, either burn or escape,” said Mohammad Musa, who was hiding in his room on the top floor.

    Reuters/NAN

  • Italy donates $5m to help eradicate polio in Afghanistan

    Italy donates $5m to help eradicate polio in Afghanistan

    The Italian government donated 5 million dollars ( 4.3 million euros ) to the UNICEF and WHO to help eradicate polio in Afghanistan, a UNICEF statement said on Tuesday.

    “Of this amount, 2.9 million dollars (2.5 million euros) will go to UNICEF and WHO, which are both working in the framework of the National Emergency Action Plan for Polio (NEAP) aimed at interrupting the disease transmission in Afghanistan”.

    The statement also noted that the remaining 2.1 million dollars (1.8 million euros) have been granted to UNICEF to improve the coverage and quality of nutrition services for children under five, adolescent girls and mothers in the most deprived provinces.

    “Improving the nutritional status of children in Afghanistan is a priority,” said Adele Khodr, UNICEF Representative in Afghanistan quoted in the statement.

    “When children don’t get the nutrients they need at a young age, they are not able to reach their full potential and Afghanistan misses out on one of its most valuable resources — its children.

    “Polio remains endemic in only three countries in the world — Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria.

    Around 10 million children under the age of five receive vaccinations multiple times every year, in all areas of the country, UNICEF said.

    There has been immense progress in eradicating polio in Afghanistan and the country is closer to stopping transmission than ever before, the statement said.

    NAN

  • India key partner for U.S. in modernising Afghanistan – Tillerson

    India key partner for U.S. in modernising Afghanistan – Tillerson

    India will be a key partner for the U.S. that can help modernise Afghanistan both politically and economically, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said.

    Tillerson made this known in a statement after President Donald Trump announced the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan.

    “India will be an important partner in the effort to ensure peace and stability in the region, and we welcome its role in supporting Afghanistan’s political and economic modernization,” Tillerson said.

    Earlier President Donald Trump unveiled the U.S. strategy in Afghanistan which included expanded authorities to target terrorists.

    However, Trump said that the United States would not reveal troop numbers or plans going forward.

    Reacting, New Delhi welcomed the announcement of a new strategy of U.S. President Donald Trump for Afghanistan, the Indian Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.

    “We welcome President Trump’s determination to enhance efforts to overcome the challenges facing Afghanistan and confronting issues of safe havens and other forms of cross-border support enjoyed by terrorists.

    “India shares these concerns and objectives,” the statement said.

    The Indian ministry also reaffirmed its commitment to support the Afghan government’s efforts aimed at ensuring peace and security in the country.

    “We are committed to supporting the Government and the people of Afghanistan in their efforts to bring peace, security, stability and prosperity in their country.

    “We have been steadfast in extending reconstruction and development assistance to Afghanistan in keeping with our traditional friendship with its people.

    “We will continue these efforts, including in partnership with other countries,” the ministry stressed.

    Afghanistan has long been suffering from unstable political, social and security situation due to the activity of the Taliban and the Islamic State terrorist groups.

    The Afghan National Defence and Security Forces supported by the U.S.-led coalition are currently conducting joint offensive operations to combat terrorism across the country.