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Afghan worker dies of gas poisoning inside well in Tehran
Iranian media have reported that an Afghan worker died of gas poisoning inside a well in Tehran.
According to IRIB news agency, the 40-year-old worker entered the 35-meter deep well on Friday morning to help his 30-year-old colleague who had fainted inside the well.
Jalal Malaki, the spokesman of the Tehran Fire Department, said that the firefighters then entered the well and pulled out both the workers.
He said that the 30-year-old man was injured, and the 40-year-old man died.
Malaki added that the cause of the worker's death was most likely gas leakage from the inner layers of the soil.
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Twenty-five Afghans released from Iraqi prisons
The ministry said in a statement that they were imprisoned in different provinces of Iraq for six months due to a lack of legal documents.
The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation has announced that 25 Afghan nationals have been released from prisons in Iraq.
The ministry said in a statement that they were imprisoned in different provinces of Iraq for six months due to a lack of legal documents.
Based on the statement, the released prisoners returned to the country via Iran on Friday/
After being registered at the Nimroz border officials, the individuals were introduced to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to receive assistance.
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Khalilzad says it would have been better to get IEA involved in talks early on
He noted that the anger and feelings of the US leadership at that time would have made it difficult to reconcile with the IEA, but the IEA members, in conversations in Doha, blamed Karzai and the Northern Alliance figures.
Former US special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation, Zalmay Khalilzad, has said that it would have been better to get the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) involved in negotiations or deliberations about the future early on.
Speaking in a podcast released by Doha Debates, Khalilzad said that senior IEA members had met chairman of the interim authority in Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai, following the Bonn negotiations, saying they would accept the new authority, provided that they could live in honor and dignity in their homes and not to be pursued and prosecuted.
He noted that the anger and feelings of the US leadership at that time would have made it difficult to reconcile with the IEA, but the IEA members, in conversations in Doha, blamed Karzai and the Northern Alliance figures.
“They (IEA) thought that 20 years of war and all the loss of life on all sides of Afghanistan was due to that mistake, as they saw it, to that neglect by President Karzai,” he said.
The former US diplomat recalled that President Donald Trump decided in 2018 to get troops out of Afghanistan believing the US wouldn’t succeed in winning the war and that priorities had changed.
Khalilzad said that he kept insisting in talks with the IEA that nothing would be agreed to until everything is agreed to, but there was this messaging from Washington and a desire not to link, too tightly, withdrawal to the agreement between the government and the IEA because of an assumption that the “Afghans would not agree with each other.”
On the two secret annexes of the Doha Agreement, Khalilzad said that they were about the specifics of the withdrawal process and terrorism issues, not the future Afghan government.
He emphasized that the Doha agreement meets the core concerns of the United States as not as single American was killed by the IEA during the 18 months and IEA is living up to its commitments regarding terrorism.
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Four Afghans among those killed in attack on miners in Pakistan’s Balochistan
A total of 20 miners were killed in the attack by unidentified gunmen in Duki district of Balochistan province.
Four Afghans are among those who were killed in Friday’s attack on coal miners in Pakistan’s Balochistan province, Kabul confirmed.
A total of 20 miners were killed in the attack by unidentified gunmen in Duki district of Balochistan province.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) in a statement strongly condemned the attack and called on the government of Pakistan to take “necessary actions” to prevent such “unfortunate incidents” in the future.
It added that the Consulate General of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) in Quetta had been directed to provide necessary assistance to ensure the repatriation of the Afghan victims’ bodies to Afghanistan.
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