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Save the Children say about 1,500 children without homes after Nangarhar floods
Save the Children is responding to urgent needs through existing health and emergency response programming. Teams have also been deployed to the affected areas to determine the extent of damage and immediate needs.
Floods from heavy rains and storms have killed about 40 people in eastern Afghanistan and about 1,500 children have lost their homes in the latest climate disaster to hit the country, Save the Children said Tuesday.
According to a statement issued by the organization, about 1.36 million people - of which an estimated 858,000 are children - live in the districts in Nangarhar, Kunar, and Laghman provinces that have been impacted by the storms that come just two months after heavy rainfall in the northeast killed about 350 people.
The latest floods have injured at least 350 people and caused extensive damage to about 400 houses as well as a hospital in Jalalabad city.
The Islamic Emirate has confirmed these numbers but warned they could rise as rescue operations continue.
Save the Children stated the storms have also caused damage to a reception center in Torkham set up for returning refugees from Pakistan.
More than 649,000 Afghans have returned from Pakistan since September 2023 after Pakistan said all undocumented foreigners must leave the country voluntarily or face deportation. Nearly half of all returnees are children.
Infrastructure damage has also been reported to telecommunications networks and several roads have been cut off in Nangarhar following the storms. This is making it difficult to access affected communities.
Arshad Malik, Country Director for Save the Children in Afghanistan, said: “Afghanistan’s children have endured decades of suffering and now extreme flooding has battered the country again and again, bringing with it fresh devastation, destruction and death.
“These extremely heavy rains and floods are further evidence of our rapidly changing climate, outpacing families' ability to adapt. They are especially harming those least responsible for the damage – children.
“Afghanistan is already struggling to meet existing needs due to dwindling international funding. With more support from the international community, we can together address the immediate and long term impacts of the climate crisis in Afghanistan and help communities to prepare for the impacts of extreme weather events,” he said.
Save the Children is responding to urgent needs through existing health and emergency response programming. Teams have also been deployed to the affected areas to determine the extent of damage and immediate needs.
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Canada sent 19 failed asylum seekers back to Afghanistan last year
Canada's border guards sent 19 rejected Afghan asylum seekers back to the country last year despite Otawa’s Temporary Suspension of Removals (TSR) that has been in place for Afghan nationals since 1994.
CBC reported that none of the 19 Afghans had their cases rejected on the basis of safety or security risks. The border service did not however reveal further details.
The border agency said a TSR is meant to "halt removals to a country or place when general conditions, such as armed conflict or an environmental disaster, pose a risk to the entire civilian population."
It also said individuals who were found inadmissible "on grounds of criminality, serious criminality, international or human rights violations, organized crime, or security" can be removed despite a TSR, CBC reported.
The CBSA said the 19 who failed their refugee claims left Canada "voluntarily," and that the Afghans were "aware that they benefit from a stay of removal due to the Temporary Suspension of Removal on Afghanistan but requested to have their removal order enforced despite the legislative stay.
"In other words, the individual was advised that they can remain in Canada until the TSR is lifted and they opted to return to Afghanistan."
Canada has welcomed some 54,000 Afghans since August 2021, surpassing a commitment it made to bring in 40,000 in 2021.
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Trump team compiling list of military officers responsible for US withdrawal from Afghanistan
Trump has on a number of occasions condemned the withdrawal as a “humiliation” and “the most embarrassing day in the history of our country.”
Citing a US official and a person familiar with the plan, NBC stated a commission would then gather information about who was directly involved in the decision-making for the military, how it was carried out, and whether the military leaders could be eligible for charges as serious as treason.
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Ottawa taking detention of Canadian in Afghanistan ‘very seriously’
Lavery helped an estimated 100 Afghans flee Kabul during the chaotic withdrawal of US and allied forces.
The Canadian government is taking "very seriously" the detention in Afghanistan of a former member of Canada's elite special forces, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Saturday.
Retired soldier David Lavery, known in Kabul as Canadian Dave, was detained by the Islamic Emirate shortly after landing in Kabul on Monday, according to Canadian broadcaster CTV News.
His whereabouts are unknown, the outlet added, citing unnamed sources.
Asked about Lavery, Trudeau said: "I can first of all assure you that the Canadian government is taking very, very seriously the situation."
He also said consular assistance has been provided to Lavery's family.
Lavery helped an estimated 100 Afghans flee Kabul during the chaotic withdrawal of US and allied forces.
He spent decades in the Canadian military and is said to have been a key member of its elite Joint Task Force 2 special operations unit.
More recently, Lavery has reportedly operated a private security firm in Kabul.
The Islamic Emirate has not yet commented.
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