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New school year starts across the country, but not for high school girls

Wednesday, March 20, ushered in the start of the new school year in Afghanistan, but to the disappointment of girls across the country, there was still no word on when they could return to class.
Commenting on this, the US State Department said that the education of girls is vital for Islamic Emirate recognition.
According to the State Department’s spokesman Vedant Patel: “Fair treatment of Afghan women and girls is one of our biggest priorities in relation to our policy towards Afghanistan.
“We still believe that this is something that should be important to the Taliban (Islamic Emirate) and we think that it is critical to their desire to gain international legitimacy. And therefore, the fact that Afghan women and girls do not have access to schools this year is sad.”
The US Special Representative for Women and Human Rights of Afghanistan also commented and said the ongoing ban on high school and higher education for Afghan girls was heartbreaking and an extraordinary situation for women and girls in the world.
Rina Amiri said: “Schools opened in Afghanistan, but once again girls cannot go to school. This is a sad situation and a very heartbreaking situation for girls and women all over the world. We must remember this and the Taliban (Islamic Emirate) too; there is no comparison. What we see in Afghanistan does not exist in Muslim-majority countries.”
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Khalilzad: Another US citizen to be released from Afghan custody soon

Zalmay Khalilzad, the former U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan, has announced the release of another American citizen in the country.
Khalilzad said in a post on his X account that, according to information from the Islamic Emirate’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Faye Dai Hall, an American citizen who has been in custody in Afghanistan, will be released soon.
Earlier, George Glezmann, an American citizen whom the Islamic Emirate had held for over two years, was also released.
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About $80 billion worth of US military equipment abandoned in Afghanistan: Vance

US Vice President JD Vance said on Friday that Joe Biden administration left about $80 billion worth of military equipment in Afghanistan, which was a “catastrophic error.”
Vance made the remarks during a visit to a military base in Greenland.
He also said the Biden administration’s “catastrophic error” led to the deaths of 13 US soldiers in an attack during the evacuation at Kabul airport in August 2021.
Earlier, US President Donald Trump also criticized the abandonment of military equipment in Afghanistan and called for its return.
The Islamic Emirate, however, has said that the weapons left by the US in Afghanistan belong to the Afghans and will not be returned.
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IEA frees over 2,400 prisoners on the occasion of Eid

The Supreme Court announced on Saturday that based on the ruling of the supreme leader of the Islamic Emirate, 2,463 prisoners have been pardoned and released on the occasion of Eid al-Fitr.
The court said in a statement that the prison terms of another 3,152 prisoners have been reduced.
Eid in Afghanistan will be celebrated on Sunday or Monday, depending on the moon sighting.
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