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Reports: Mansour Dadullah killed in Zabul
Reports suggest that Mansour Dadullah, deputy of Mullah Muhammad Rasoul, Taliban’s splinter leader has been killed by Mullah Muhammad Akhtar Mansour’s group members in Khak-e Afghan district of Zabul province.
Local officials in Zabul confirmed his death, but Gul Islam Siyal, spokesman of Zabul governor says that Mansour Dadullah was killed in Ghal-e Orghan area of Paktiya province.
However, sources close to Taliban confirm that Mansour Dadullah has been killed in Khak-e Afghan district.
In early September, Afghan media sources had announced that Dadullah was said to have joined the Afghanistan branch of the Islamic State group, following disputes over the appointment of Akhtar Mansour as leader of the Taliban.
The announcement came from an Islamic State supporter in Afghanistan who further stated that 230 IS fighters were deployed to Zabul province from Farah province to aid Dadullah's forces against 2,100 Taliban militants sent by Mansour.
Mullah Mansour Dadullah a senior Taliban commander and brother of notorious Taliban commander Mullah Dadullah Akhund arrived in Zabul province over a month ago and announced division with Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour.
Born in 1972, Mullah Mansour Dadullah is Mullah Dadullah's younger half-brother who succeeded him as a senior military commander of the Taliban in southern Afghanistan.
He comes from the Arghandab district of Kandahar province, and belongs to the Kakar Pashtun tribe.
Fierce clashes were ongoing between two rival Taliban groups in southern Afghanistan. Skirmishes have been taking place in southern Zabul province between fighters loyal to the widely-recognised Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour and followers of Mansoor Dadullah, a deputy of splinter-group leader Mohamed Rasool who announced his own faction earlier this month.
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Azizi encourages Afghan businessmen based in Türkiye to invest in Afghanistan
Acting Minister of Industry and Commerce Nooruddin Azizi on Friday during his trip to Türkiye met with Afghan businessmen based in the country, the ministry said in a statement.
The statement stated Aziz called on the Afghan traders to return home and invest in Afghanistan.
Afghan investors also said that some of them have transferred their funds to Afghanistan and some others stated they are planning to return to the country.
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Six countries refer Afghanistan’s women’s rights violations to ICC
Spain, France, Luxembourg, Chile, Costa Rica and Mexico have referred the case of women’s rights violations in Afghanistan to the International Criminal Court (ICC).
These six countries called on the ICC prosecutor on Thursday to investigate the ongoing and systematic violations of the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Chile announced on Thursday that due to the deteriorating conditions and the critical situation for women and girls in Afghanistan, the case has been referred to the ICC.
According to the report, the ICC prosecutor resumed investigations into Afghanistan in 2022, after they were paused in 2020 at the request of Afghan officials. This resumption emphasizes the urgency of addressing the ongoing human rights abuses in the country.
The six countries involved in the referral have specifically requested the ICC to focus on the situation of Afghan women and girls, who are facing constant and systematic violations of their rights. They have urged the prosecutor to consider the crimes committed against women and girls since the Islamic Emirate’s takeover in August 2021.
However, a number of neighboring countries have said that the international community should not issue orders to the current government of Afghanistan but interact with it.
In an interview with Al-Arabiya TV, Pakistan's First Lady Aseefa Bhutto Zardari said that the international community should have faith in the Afghan government, and Pakistan, as a neighbor, can encourage the Islamic Emirate to address women's problems and border issues.
IEA, meanwhile, has repeatedly rejected the violation of human rights, especially the rights of women and girls, and considered the concerns in this regard to be baseless.
IEA still considers the handling of citizens' rights as an internal issue of Afghanistan and has asked countries and international organizations not to interfere in Afghanistan's internal affairs.
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British, Qatari officials meet to discuss Afghanistan
British Special Representative for Afghanistan Andrew McCoubrey met Qatari foreign minister's special envoy Faisal bin Abdullah Al Hanzab in Doha, it was announced on Thursday.
The two sides discussed several topics of common interest, particularly the latest political, security and humanitarian developments in Afghanistan, Qatar's foreign ministry said in a statement.
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