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Uruzgan governor claims poet and writer killed by Taliban

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Abdullah Atefi, a poet and historian from Uruzgan province, was killed Wednesday night, allegedly by the Taliban.

According to Mohammad Omar Shirzad, governor of Uruzgan, Atefi was dragged out of his house in Chora district before being killed.

“In any area under Taliban control, the Taliban kill, torture, or threaten scholars, tribal elders, civil society activists, writers, poets, and even women,” said Shirzad.

Meanwhile, First Vice President Amrullah Saleh condemned the incident in a tweet and said “the Afghan brain is under attack; Taliban want a wasteland.”

“Atefi was “taken out of his home in Chora district of Uruzgan by the ISI backed Talibs and shot dead on the spot. His crime – knowing economics and knowing history,” Saleh tweeted.

The Taliban has meanwhile denied involvement in the murder of Atefi.

“The murder of writer and poet Abdullah Atefi in Chora district of Uruzgan province has nothing to do with the Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate (Taliban),” the group’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid tweeted.

He said Atefi had been an impartial writer and poet.

This comes a well-known local comedian, Nazar Mohammad, who was known as Khasha Zwan, was gunned down last month, by the Taliban, in Kandahar.

According to sources, Khasha Zwan was assaulted by the militants before being killed.

He was allegedly dragged out of his house, with his hands tied behind his back and his body dumped in the Dand district of Kandahar.

Taliban later claimed responsibility adding that Khasha Zwan was not a comedian but he was fighting against them.

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Pakistan’s Punjab to send home 20 more Afghans in repatriation drive

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Pakistan’s Punjab province was set to repatriate 20 Afghan citizens to their homeland on Thursday as it continued its drive against undocumented Afghan nationals, a Punjab Home Department spokesperson said.

The nationwide repatriation campaign, launched in late 2023, has strained relations between neighbours Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The policy has drawn criticism from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which has said it has received reports of arrests and expulsions of legally registered Afghans and warned that sending them back in this way breaches Pakistan’s international obligations.

According to a Punjab Home Department statement, official statistics show that more than 2 million Afghan citizens have been sent back from across Pakistan. “In Punjab alone, over 150,000 undocumented Afghans have been repatriated,” the statement said, Reuters reported.

It added that all Afghan citizens without a valid visa are required to leave, while those with valid visas may continue to work or run businesses.

Punjab is currently operating 37 holding centres accommodating 69 Afghan nationals, 20 of whom were scheduled for repatriation on Thursday, the spokesperson said.

Tensions between the two countries remain high. Pakistan accuses Afghanistan of failing to act against what it says are terror networks operating from Afghan soil. Afghanistan denies the allegations.

On Wednesday, Pakistan summoned the Afghan deputy head of mission to raise concerns about a February 16 attack on security forces in Bajaur in northwest Pakistan that killed 11 Pakistani soldiers and a child.

Last year, the two sides were engaged in their heaviest clashes since the IEA returned to power in 2021, though a fragile ceasefire has held since the deadly October fighting.

Afghanistan last week freed three Pakistani soldiers, detained in the October 12 clashes, handing them over to a Saudi delegation in Kabul.

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UN Afghanistan coordinator holds farewell meeting with FM Muttaqi

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Indrika Ratwatte, the United Nations’ Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan and Humanitarian Coordinator, held a farewell meeting with Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi in Kabul.

The meeting was also attended by Georgette Gagnon, the Acting Head of UNAMA and Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General (Political), along with her accompanying delegation. Both sides discussed ongoing cooperation and coordination between the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and UN agencies, according to a statement released by the Foreign Ministry on Friday.

Minister Muttaqi praised Indrika’s role as the UN’s humanitarian coordinator in Afghanistan and wished him success in his future assignments.

Indrika, in return, thanked the Foreign Ministry for its cooperation throughout his tenure and described his mission in Afghanistan as filled with valuable experiences and positive memories.

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Afghanistan welcomes investment and technology partnerships with India

Azizi welcomed the proposals, emphasizing Afghanistan’s abundant investment opportunities and reaffirming full support.

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Nooruddin Azizi, Afghanistan’s Minister of Commerce and Industry, met with Ankush Satana and his delegation at his office to discuss expanding economic and technological cooperation.

During the meeting, Satana expressed interest in establishing a gemstone exhibition salon in Afghanistan and connecting Afghan and Indian traders in the pharmaceutical sector.

He also highlighted Germany’s advanced technology capable of producing large quantities of diesel fuel from collected plastic waste and expressed willingness to transfer this technology to Afghanistan.

Azizi welcomed the proposals, emphasizing Afghanistan’s abundant investment opportunities and reaffirming full support.

He noted that the country’s private sector is active and prepared to collaborate with foreign investors.

This meeting represents a significant step toward strengthening economic partnerships and fostering technology transfer, further boosting Afghanistan’s position as a hub for investment and trade in the region.

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