Pakistan and Afghanistan Seek Peace
Digest more
Agence France-Presse on MSN
Afghan woman defies Taliban govt as accredited ambassador to Austria
The Taliban government asked her to leave. "I don't recognise the Taliban as Afghanistan's legitimate government, and they don't have recognition here in Austria," said 53-year-old Bakhtari.
Pakistan has been urging the Taliban for four years to take decisive, effective measures against terrorist outfits'
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has said that the Afghan Taliban acknowledged the presence of the proscribed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and other militant groups operating from Afghanistan soil during
Afghanistan occupies a central position in Tehran’s changing playbook, as the country is both a risk and a buffer for Iran.
Pakistan’s defense minister warned Afghanistan on Wednesday that any new “terrorist or suicide attack” by militants on Pakistani soil would draw a stern response, hours after talks between the two countries in Istanbul failed to secure a peace agreement.
Afghanistan faces near-total digital blackout after Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada's directive dismantled the country's fibre-optic network infrastructure.
The Taliban’s hard-line government in Afghanistan is making major inroads in garnering legitimacy abroad. Despite its extremist policies, the international community has accepted that the Islamist group is here to stay,
Afghanistan's Taliban rulers blocked internet access nationally for two days without any explanation, but suddenly, the country is coming back online.
Afghans express growing resentment towards the Taliban due to economic hardship and social repression, warns Dr. Nilofar Sakhi.