Tag: Taliban

  • India should not do business with this Taliban govt: Yashwant after Afghan caretaker cabinet named

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: As the Taliban announced a caretaker Cabinet, former external affairs minister Yashwant Sinha on Tuesday said India cannot and should not do business with the government formed in Afghanistan.

    The Taliban Tuesday announced a caretaker Cabinet, giving top posts to Taliban personalities who dominated the 20-year battle against the US-led coalition and its Afghan government allies.

    ALSO READ: Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund to lead Taliban govt, new Afghan ministers announced

    Mullah Hasan Akhund has been named as the Interim Prime Minister, while Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, who had led talks with the United States and signed the deal that led to America’s final withdrawal from Afghanistan, will be one of two deputies to Akhund.

    “India cannot and shd not do business with this Taliban govt in Afghanistan,” Sinha tweeted after the news of the forming of a caretaker government came in.

    Sinha’s remarks come weeks after he, in an interview to PTI, said India should be “open-minded” about dealing with the Taliban and suggested that it should open its embassy in Kabul and send back the ambassador.

    ALSO READ: Turkey President Erdogan cautious on new Afghan government

    Noting that the people of Afghanistan have great love for India while Pakistan is not popular among them, Sinha had said that the Indian government should not conclude that the Taliban will place itself “in Pakistan’s lap” as every country furthers its own interests.

    Sinha was the foreign minister in the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government but became a critic of the Modi government and quit the BJP. He is currently vice president of the Trinamool Congress.

    Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid was quoted by media reports as saying that Amir Khan Muttaqi will be Afghanistan’s acting foreign minister while Mullah Yaqoob, son of Taliban’s founder Mullah Omar, will serve as the acting defence minister.

    Sirajuddin Haqqani, the leader of the Haqqani Network, will serve as acting interior minister in the interim government, the reports said.

  • Afghanistan’s takeover by Taliban will benefit Pakistan, harm India: Asaduddin Owaisi

    By PTI

    LUCKNOW: AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi on Tuesday said the takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban is not good for India and it will benefit Pakistan.

    “Over Rs 35,000 crore of our taxpayers’ money has been invested in developmental works of Afghanistan. Now the Taliban has come there. The changes in Afghanistan are not good for India,” Owaisi said in reply to a question on the effect of the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan on UP politics.

    “Whatever is happening (in Afghanistan) will benefit Pakistan more. This should be understood,” he said.

    ​ALSO READ | Assembly polls: Asaduddin Owaisi to begin three-day UP visit from Ayodhya on September 7 

    Owaisi was talking to reporters on the occasion of former MP Atiq Ahmad and his wife joining AIMIM.

    Presently lodged in a Gujarat jail in one of the several criminal cases pending against him, Ahmad joined the Owaisi’s party months ahead of the 2022 assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh.

    Owaisi has been making efforts to expand the party across the country and he has had reasonable success in Maharashtra and Bihar.

    ​ALSO READ | Mullah Hassan to head proposed Taliban government, Mullah Baradar to serve as his deputy: Media report

    The party, however, could not make gains in West Bengal.

    Talking about the Afghan issue earlier on September 2 in Hyderabad, Owaisi had asked the NDA government to say whether it considered the Taliban as a terrorist organisation or not.

    “We are asking the Modi government. Say this clearly. Do you consider the Taliban as a terrorist organisation or not? If you don’t, India is chairman of the UN Sanction Committee. Will you delist the top 100 leaders of Taliban, Haqqani leaders? If you don’t, will you include them in the UAPA terror list?” he said.

  • SCO Summit: PM to raise terror, Afghanistan issues in presence of Imran

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who will virtually attend the SCO meeting on September 16 and 17, is likely to raise the issue of terrorism in the presence of Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan.

    Sources said Modi will raise India’s concerns over terrorism and also name the Taliban. India have criticised the militant group at the UN Security Council and UN Human Rights Council.

    According to sources, while highlighting India’s stand against terrorism, Modi will also speak about Islamabad with regards to the situation in Afghanistan.

    Apart from Modi, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Imran, Russian President Vladimir Putin and other leaders from central Asian countries will attend the meeting hosted by Tajikistan as the chair.

    The SCO is an eight-member bloc which includes Russia, China, India, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

    The SCO summit comes after the bloc’s foreign ministers, defence ministers and national security advisors held a series of meetings.

    It is likely that a separate meeting of the SCO-Afghanistan contact group would be held on the sidelines. The Afghanistan contact group meeting is likely to be attended by Taliban co-founder Mullah Baradar.

    Meanwhile, India on Monday announced that the BRICS summit would be held on Sepatember 9.

    “The meeting will be attended by the President of Brazil, Jair Bolsanaro; President of Russia, Vladimir Putin; President of China, Xi Jinping; and President of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa. India’s National Security Adviser, Ajit Doval, President of the New Development Bank, Marcos Troyjo, the pro tempore Chair of the BRICS Business Council,” said a statement.

  • Modi chairs high-level meeting on Taliban threat; MHA says no Afghan will be asked to leave India

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: To assess the changing situation in Afghanistan, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday chaired a meeting with Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Foreign Minister S Jaishankar, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, Home Minister Amit Shah and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, at his residence.

    The meeting was held in the context of two developments — the Taliban claiming victory over the last pocket of resistance in Panjshir valley and ISI chief Lt Gen Faiz Hameed meeting Taliban’s de-facto leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar on Monday.

    The visit of ISI chief was the first high-level visit of any Pakistani official to Afghanistan since the Taliban took over Kabul on August 15.

    Sources said the meeting deliberated on India’s position towards the Taliban and also on how to contain the presence of anti-India terror groups in Afghanistan.

    Sources told this newspaper that Indian agencies are closely monitoring developments in Kabul, especially with the Taliban dithering over the issue of government formation.

    A senior government functionary said New Delhi’s immediate focus is to ensure that Afghan soil is not used for terror activities against India and evacuations.

    Earlier last week, Pakistani media had reported that a delegation of senior officials led by Lt Gen Hameed was in Kabul at the invitation of the Taliban, but the insurgent group said Islamabad had proposed his visit.

    On Sunday, Taliban said that he was in Afghanistan “to improve bilateral relations between Kabul and Islamabad”.

    As the situation in Afghanistan continues to be uncertain, the Union Home Ministry has said that no Afghan national living in India will be asked to leave the country without its approval, according to officials.

    The MHA’s decision came about a fortnight after the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan and many Afghans arriving in India fearing retribution from that country’s new rulers.

    No Afghan national will be asked to leave India by the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO) without prior approval of the home ministry and such cases will be referred to the MHA by the FRRO, a home ministry official said.

    This came after a woman member of Afghan parliament, Rangina Kargar, was deported from Delhi’s IGI Airport to Istanbul despite valid papers.

    The government had later apologised to Kargar.

    The government has already extended visas of all categories granted to citizens of all countries, including Afghanistan, living in India on “gratis basis” till September 30.

    Many Afghan nationals who came to India before the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan have been staying in India for more than six months now and, in many cases, since the first lockdown was announced in March 2020.

    The MHA has decided to extend till September 30 the existing facility of deemed extension of regular visa or e-visa or stay stipulation period, without levy of any overstated penalty, granted to foreign nationals stranded in India due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Such foreign nationals may not be required to submit any application to FRRO concerned for extension of their visas.

    Before leaving the country, they may apply for exit permission which would be granted by the FRRO on gratis basis without levy of any overstay penalty.

    If an extension of visa is required beyond September 30, the foreign national concerned may apply for an extension on the online e-FRRO platform on a payment basis which would be considered by the FRRO subject to eligibility as per the provisions of the visa manual.

    According to the visa rules, Afghan nationals should get themselves and their family members registered within 14 days of their arrival with the local police, except those exempted from it.

    Several Afghan nationals, feeling threatened or facing the fear of persecution at the hands of the Taliban, have expressed their desire to stay in India.

    After the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan, the MHA had announced the introduction of a new category of visa called e-Emergency X-Misc visa for Afghan nationals.

    The ministry has also announced that all Afghan nationals henceforth must travel to India only on e-Visa in view of the prevailing situation in Afghanistan.

    India has already shut down its missions in Afghanistan and the visas are processed in New Delhi now.

    (With PTI Inputs)

  • Afghan soil should not be source of terrorism for other countries: Russia

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The Afghan soil should not be a source of spreading terrorism in other countries of the region and both Russia and India have “common concerns” over it in the backdrop of the unfolding situation in Afghanistan, Russian Ambassador Nikolay Kudashev said on Monday.

    Delving into implications of the latest developments in Afghanistan, the Russian envoy also said that there is a danger of the possible spread of terror into Russian territory as well as Kashmir, noting that India and Russia will continue to work together to counter any threat of terrorism.

    Kudashev told PTI in an interview that Russia would like to see an inclusive government in Afghanistan that is able to ensure security, stability and predictability, adding the issue of recognition to any new dispensation in Kabul is not an immediate area of focus.

    The Russian envoy said that there is “ample scope” for cooperation between India and Russia on Afghanistan and both sides have been in regular touch with each other on the latest developments in the war-torn country.

    “Both India and Russia are concerned about the situation in Afghanistan. We want an inclusive government. We want that the Afghan soil should not be a source of terror for other countries in the region,” Kudashev said.

    “These are the very basic values that bring Russia and India together. I do not see much of a difference in our position on Afghanistan,” he said.

    Asked whether Russia is concerned about the possible export of terrorism to Russia from Afghanistan, the envoy said “definitely” and noted that any escalation of the civilian conflict would be detrimental to the regional security scenario.

    “As far as the phenomena of terror are concerned, we do share our concerns with India. There is a danger of terror being spread to the Russian territory and the territory of Kashmir. This is a matter of common concern,” Kudashev said, replying to a question on the possibility of various terror groups operating from Afghanistan shifting focus from the war-ravaged country.

    Asked about Pakistan backing various terror groups operating in Afghanistan and whether they pose a threat to regional security, Kudashev said Russia expects Pakistan to be among the countries that would like to see predictability and a secure environment in Afghanistan.

    There have been mounting concerns in India over the possibility of a rise in activities of various terror groups, including Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.

    Indian Ambassador to Qatar Deepak Mittal met senior Taliban leader Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai in Doha last Tuesday.

    In the meeting, Mittal conveyed to Stanekzai that Afghanistan’s soil should not be used for anti-Indian activities and terrorism.

    It was the first publicly acknowledged formal engagement between the two sides.

    Kudashev said tackling the threat of terror has been a matter of continued dialogue between Russia and India under multiple frameworks, including the bilateral mechanism of the counter-terror working group.

    “Counter-terrorism is part of each and every bilateral meeting. Rest assured we know about this danger and we are most willing to cooperate to deal with it,” he said.

    The Russian envoy said his country would like to see the “future in Afghanistan with optimism” and there is a need to give some time to any new dispensation in Afghanistan.

    “We are for an inclusive government in Afghanistan that can ensure sustainable development in the war-torn country. The Afghan people deserve peace, stability, and sustainable development just as any other nation in the world,” Kudashev said.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin on August 24 discussed the developments in Afghanistan over a week after its capital Kabul fell to the Taliban.

    After the conversation, Russia said the two leaders expressed the intention to enhance cooperation to counter the dissemination of “terrorist ideology” and the drug threat emanating from Afghanistan and agreed to form a permanent bilateral channel for consultations on the issue.

    Russia has been a key player in pushing for the Afghan peace process before the Taliban captured power in Kabul.

  • ‘Linking RSS with Taliban is disrespectful to Hindu culture’: Shiv Sena slams Javed Akhtar

    By ANI

    MUMBAI: Shiv Sena, which is in alliance with Congress in Maharashtra, has slammed lyricist Javed Akhtar, in its mouthpiece ‘Saamana’ for the latter’s alleged comparison of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) with the Taliban, which recently captured Afghanistan following months of offensive and said “linking Hindutva with the Taliban is disrespectful to Hindu culture.”

    In the editorial, Shiv Sena said the people who think that the ideology of RSS and VHP are similar to the Taliban must introspect.

    “Nowadays one is comparing anyone with Taliban as the outfit is the biggest threat to society and mankind. Countries like Pakistan and China where democracy doesn’t exist are backing the Taliban in Afghanistan because human rights have no place in these countries. But India is a democratic country and respects an individual’s freedom so it is erroneous to compare RSS with the Taliban. India is tremendously tolerant in every way,” it said.

    “For organisations like RSS and VHP, Hindutva is a culture. They want the rights of Hindus should not be suppressed. Moreover, it has never imposed any restrictions on women’s rights. But the situation in Afghanistan is heart-wrenching. Many fled from their own country in fear, the rights of women are being suppressed,” the editorial claimed.

    Shiv Sena said that Javed Akhtar is known for his outspoken statements and has several times attacked extremist views of Muslim society, yet we do not accept the comparison of the Sangh with the Taliban.

    “Most of the population of the country is secular and respects each other religious views. We cannot accept the ‘Talibani ideology’. In spite of the fact that India being home to a majority of the Hindu population, it is a proud secular country,” Shiv Sena said.

  • India has no option but to wait and watch, avoid knee-jerk reaction: Ex-diplomats on Afghanistan

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: With Pakistan’s intelligence chief dashing to Afghanistan amidst efforts by the Taliban to finalise a government, former Indian diplomats on Sunday said the situation in the war-torn country was still in a “flux” and India has no other option but to wait and watch, while avoiding any “knee-jerk reaction”.

    Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Director General (DG) Lieutenant General Faiz Hameed rushed to Kabul on an unannounced visit.

    Hameed’s visit to Afghanistan comes as pressure is mounting on the Taliban to form an inclusive government acceptable to the international community.

    Anil Wadhwa, who served as Secretary (East) in the Ministry of External Affairs before retiring in 2017, said India should avoid any knee-jerk reaction to the developments in Afghanistan and follow a wait and watch policy.

    “India should avoid a knee-jerk reaction because it remains to be seen what kind of government is formed by the Taliban, whether it is an inclusive government or not.

    No knee jerk reaction (India should), just wait and see how the situation emerges,” Wadhwa told PTI.

    On the ISI chief’s visit to Kabul, he said the influence of the ISI on the Taliban, especially the Haqqanis, is well known and so they would like to have that influence in the new government.

    Asked if India should spell out its expectations from the new government, Wadhwa said this needs to be conveyed whenever there is an engagement with the Taliban representatives in Doha.

    He added that India, in all likelihood, has already conveyed to the Talibani side that Afghanistan’s soil should not be used for anti-India activities.

    T C A Raghavan, who was India’s High Commissioner to Pakistan from June 2013-December 2015, also echoed similar views and said the situation in Afghanistan was still in a flux and India should adopt a wait and watch approach.

    “In my view the situation in Afghanistan is still in a flux, so we should not end up in a situation where we are commenting on our own analysis.

    Because the Pakistan ISI chief is there, it is easy to start commenting on our own impression that he is forming the government,” he told PTI.

    “Situation (in Afghanistan) is in a flux and we should await developments. The fact that Pakistanis have a certain position in Afghanistan today is undeniable,” Raghavan said.

    Asked if India should spell out its expectations of a government in Afghanistan and set out its preconditions for recognising the regime there, he said, “I don’t think we are at a stage where we make our objectives into preconditions.”

    Rakesh Sood, a former Ambassador of India to Afghanistan, said, “I think we have no choice but to wait and watch. I don’t think we have any other option.”

    “The situation may be in a flux but I don’t think India is that significant. If the DG ISI has to go there to sort out matters, it is quite clear as to what the situation is. He has not gone there to exchange views about the weather,” Sood said.

    G Parthasarathy, who has been India’s envoy in several countries including Pakistan, said India should not rush into anything and avoid any knee-jerk reaction to the developments in Afghanistan.

    “Having dealt with Pakistan and lived there for seven years, I would have been surprised if the Pakistanis did not do what they were doing. It is only sections of Indians that are taken for a ride about Pakistan,” he said in reference to the ISI chief’s visit.

    Cautioning against the China-Pakistan alliance, Parthasarathy said, “We will go wrong as long as we underestimate the dangers posed by the China-Pakistan alliance. Pakistan by itself is no threat, it becomes problematic when it acts in alliance with China.”

    On what should be India’s approach, the former diplomat told PTI that India should not rush into anything, take time and see the direction in which things are moving as Afghanistan’s internal politics will shape the developments.

    “There are groups like the Haqqani network which are agents of the ISI because the Haqqani family lives in Pakistan. Let us see how it plays out. No need for us to rush into anything. The sensible Afghans have told us that they appreciate Indian assistance,” he said, adding that India has done the right thing till now.

    K C Singh, who has served as India’s envoy to the UAE and Iran, said the fact that the formation of the Taliban government has been delayed indicates a struggle between the more moderate elements led by Mullah Barader and the Haqqanis fronting for Pakistan and its army.

    “Most countries are waiting and watching but also exerting pressure on the Taliban. India should take up a public position on what kind of inclusive government it expects, pending which it would not recognise the Taliban government,” he told PTI.

    ISI DG Hameed’s visit to Afghanistan is the first high-level visit of any Pakistani official to Afghanistan since the Taliban took over of Kabul on August 15.

    Since then, the Taliban have been trying to form a government but so far have held back the announcement.

    The Taliban had postponed the formation of a new government in Afghanistan for this week, as the insurgent group struggles to give shape to a broad-based and inclusive administration acceptable to the international community.

  • Legacy pharma firm which sold ‘Swadeshi’ dysentery drug to Afghans waits and watches after Taliban takeover

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: Satarupa Mukherjee, director of the 85-year-old East India Pharmaceuticals, is a worried businesswoman as she digests the impact of the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan.

    Her firm, based out of Little Russel Street in the heart of Kolkata, used to ship multiple containers every month of its best-selling drug Enteroquinol, used to treat amoebic dysentery, a disease endemic to millions of Indians and Afghans, to a land port near Kabul.

    “I don’t know whether our market will remain under Taliban rule. The disease will, but the situation in Afghanistan is obviously not one where we can go out and do business at the moment,” Mukherjee said.

    “Our shipments had been irregular for some time as provinces fell one after another, now it has stopped. We can only wait to see what happens next,” she said.

    Enteroquinal and eye-drop Locula were among the first drugs that her firm patented, soon after it was founded in 1936 by two friends — Ashoke Kumar Sen and Hirendra Nath Duttagupta, both freedom fighters from Bengal.

    The company, which started out in a small garage on Hare Street, was set up as a ‘Swadeshi enterprise’ meant to take on the stranglehold of British drug manufacturers whose medicines were often unaffordable for the common man in the sub-continent.

    The idea was to patent and sell ‘Swadeshi’ western-style drugs for ailments common in India.

    They were following the footprints of famous chemist Prafulla Chandra Roy, who set up India’s first pharmaceutical firm, Bengal Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals, in 1901 in the same city with the same objective.

    “Like Acharya Prafulla Roy, our founders were not interested in becoming rich, their passion was chemistry which could help poor people,” Mukherjee said.

    “The aim of that generation of pioneering pharmaceutical entrepreneurs was to make medicines affordable for the masses. When they started out, the political ‘Swadeshi’ spirit guided them,” the company’s managing director Debarshi Duttagupta said.

    Debarshi is the grandson of Hirendra Nath Duttagupta, a revolutionary associated with Surya Sen of the Chittagong Armoury raid fame.

    Duttagupta was imprisoned by the British for seven years before he turned into a ‘Swadeshi entrepreneur’.

    Many Indians enthused by the idea of creating a new industrial awakening in the country, which was not only ruled by the British but had become a typical colony that exported raw material and imported finished products, invested their life’s savings in building enterprises which challenged European mercantile supremacy in the sub-continent and helped make practicable the Congress’ call to boycott British goods.

    Kolkata, then the capital of the British Indian Empire, had become a hub of Swadeshi enterprises and a large number of pharmaceutical firms had been set up including Calcutta Chemicals, Alembic Chemicals, G D Pharmaceuticals and Bengal Immunity besides East India and Bengal Chemicals.

    Swadeshi textile and jute mills such as Mohini Mohan Cotton Mills, Dhakeshwari Textile Mills and Bharat Jute Mills had also sprung up, as did consumer goods firms, Calcutta Fanworks, Bharat Battery Manufacturing, Bengal Waterproof, Sulekha Inks, Bengal Pottery and India Machinery Company Ltd, and banks such as Comilla Union Bank and Hooghly Bank.

    Over a period of time, many of these ‘Swadeshi enterprises’ failed to withstand the rigours of the market and folded up, while some were nationalised.

    However, many like East India Pharmaceuticals continue to doggedly fight on.

    “We run on the patented development work which our firm has been doing from the very beginning. But our philosophy remains the same, our medicines are usually cheaper than rivals, we do not offer ‘incentives’ to prescribing doctors and we do not believe in laying off workers or cutting their salaries to save costs even during pandemics,” Duttagupta said.

    Principles laid out by the founding fathers including one that said no one can be laid off, have proven to be a challenge as East India modernises its drug-making plants.

    “We have committed to our board, many of whom worked with the founders, that not one of our 1,500 employees will lose their jobs, even as we bring in ultra-modern processes that reduce human interface in drug making to a bare minimum,” Duttagupta said.

    Other rules such as medical representatives not being allowed to offer anything save pens and calendars as gifts to doctors has meant that sales can be pushed only by stressing on quality and legacy goodwill.

    “Our turnover of Rs 180 crore or so is tiny when compared to new generic pharma firms which have turned into giants, but we have something few can match in this 75th anniversary of India’s Independence, we are part of that history of fighting for the country’s freedom,” he added.

  • Taliban stop planes of evacuees from leaving but unclear why

    By PTI

    KABUL: At least four planes chartered to evacuate several hundred people seeking to escape the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan have been unable to leave the country for days, officials said Sunday, with conflicting accounts emerging about why they flights weren’t able to take off as pressure ramps up on the United States to help those left behind to flee.

    An Afghan official at the airport in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif said that the would-be passengers were Afghans, many of whom did not have passports or visas, and thus were unable to leave the country.

    He said they had left the airport while the situation was sorted out. “The top Republican on the US House Foreign Affairs Committee, however, said that the group included Americans and they were sitting on the planes, but the Taliban were not letting them take off, effectively “holding them hostage.” He did not say where that information came from. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the accounts.

    The final days of America’s 20-year war in Afghanistan were marked by a harrowing airlift at Kabul’s airport to evacuate tens of thousands of people Americans and their allies who feared what the future would hold, given the Taliban’s history of repression, particularly of women.

    When the last troops pulled out on August 30, though, many were left behind. The US promised to continue working with the new Taliban rulers to get those who want to leave out, and the militants pledged to allow anyone with the proper legal documents to leave.

    But Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas told “Fox News Sunday” that American citizens and Afghan interpreters were being kept on six planes.

    “The Taliban will not let them leave the airport,” he said, adding that he’s worried “they’re going to demand more and more, whether it be cash or legitimacy as the government of Afghanistan.” He did not offer more details.

    The Afghan official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject, said it was four planes, and their intended passengers were staying at hotels while authorities worked out whether they might be able to leave the country.

    The sticking point, he indicated, is that many did not have the right travel papers. Residents of Mazar-e-Sharif also said the passengers were no longer at the airport. At least 10 families were seen at a local hotel waiting, they said, for a decision on their fates. None of them had passports or visas but said they had worked for companies allied with the US or German military.

    Others were seen at restaurants. The small airport at Mazar-e-Sharif only recently began to handle international flights and so far only to Turkey. The planes in question were bound for Doha, Qatar, the Afghan official said. It was not clear who chartered them or why they were waiting in the northern city.

    The massive airlift happened at Kabul’s international airport, which initially closed after the US withdrawal but where domestic flights have now resumed.

    Searing images of that chaotic evacuation, including people clinging to an airplane as it took off, came to define the final days of America’s longest war, just weeks after Taliban fighters retook the country in a lightning offensive.

    Since their takeover, the Taliban have sought to recast themselves as different from their 1990s incarnation, when they last ruled the country and imposed repressive restrictions across society.

    Women and girls were denied work and education, men were forced to grow beards, and television and music were banned.

    Now, the world is waiting to see the face of the new government, and many Afghans remain skeptical.

    In the weeks since they took power, signals have been mixed: Government employees including women have been asked to return to work, but some women were later ordered home by lower-ranking Taliban.

    Universities and schools have been ordered open, but fear has kept both students and teachers away. Women have demonstrated peacefully, some even having conversations about their rights with Taliban leaders. But some have been dispersed by Taliban special forces firing in the air.

    Some signs of normalcy have also begun to return. Kabul’s streets are again clogged with traffic, as Taliban fighters patrol in pickup trucks and police vehicles, brandishing their automatic weapons and flying the Taliban’s white flag. Schools have opened, and moneychangers work the street corners.

    Among the promises the Taliban have made is that once the country’s airports are up and running, Afghans with passports and visas would be allowed to travel.

    More than 100 countries issued a statement saying they would be watching to see that the new rulers held to their commitment.

    Technical teams from Qatar and Turkey arrived in recent days and are working to get the civilian airport operational. On Saturday, state-run Ariana Airlines made its first domestic flights, which continued on Sunday.

    The airport is without radar facilities, so flights are restricted to daylight hours to allow for visual landing, said official Shershah Stor. Several countries have also been bringing in humanitarian supplies.

    The Gulf state of Qatar, where the Taliban maintained a political office since 2013, is making daily flights into Kabul, delivering humanitarian aid for the war-weary nation. Bahrain also announced humanitarian assistance deliveries.

    Meanwhile, the Taliban stepped up an assault on the last remaining pocket of resistance being led by fighters opposed to their rule.

    The anti-Taliban fighters in Panjshir province, north of the Afghan capital, are being led by former vice president Amrullah Saleh, who has appealed for humanitarian aid to help the thousands of people displaced by the fighting.

    A senior Taliban spokesman tweeted Sunday that Taliban troops had overrun Rokha district, one of largest of eight districts in Panjshir.

    Several Taliban delegations have attempted negotiations with the holdouts there, but talks have failed to gain traction.

    Saleh fled to Panjshir after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani quit Afghanistan as the Taliban marched on the capital.

    The fighters’ lightning blitz across the country took less than a week to overrun some 300,000 government troops, most of whom surrendered or fled.

  • Afghanistan: BJP clueless about protecting India’s interest, claims Salman Khurshid

    By PTI

    KOLKATA: Senior Congress leader Salman Khurshid on Saturday alleged that the Centre had initially turned a blind eye to the Afghan situation and the BJP is clueless about protecting India’s interest in the region.

    Demanding that the government reveal what it discussed with the Taliban, Khurshid, a former external affairs minister, said the Congress would cooperate and support the Centre on the Afghanistan issue as it is a “matter of national security”.

    “The Centre initially turned a blind eye to the Afghan situation as if it was a problem only related to the US and its allies. There are serious concerns about security and threat to our national interests due to the ongoing situation in Afghanistan. The BJP is clueless about protecting India’s interest in the region,” he said while addressing a press conference here.

    “The government has spoken to Taliban. They should now tell us what was discussed. The countrymen should know this. The Congress party stands solidly behind protecting India’s interests and expects a mature political and diplomatic response from our government. We will cooperate and support the Centre regarding the situation in Afghanistan as it is a matter concerning national interests,” Khurshid said.

    Indian Ambassador to Qatar Deepak Mittal met senior Taliban leader Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai on Tuesday and conveyed India’s concerns that Afghanistan’s soil should not be used for anti-Indian activities and terrorism.

    The meeting took place at the Indian embassy in Doha at the request of the Taliban side and came two weeks after the outfit seized control of Kabul.

    The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) has said the discussions also focused on the safety, security and early return of Indian nationals stranded in Afghanistan and the travel of Afghan nationals, especially members of minority communities, to India.

    Khurshid also slammed the Centre’s National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP) policy, claiming that it was aimed at “looting” the people of the country and selling off India’s assets.

    “The anti-people policies of this government, just like NMP, aim at looting the people and sell India’s assets created by using public money over the last 70 years. The government has mishandled the economy and does not know what to do now. As a last resort, they are selling everything. This is a huge tragedy; it is something everyone should oppose,” he said.

    Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman last month announced Rs 6 lakh crore National Monetisation Pipeline that will look to unlock value in infrastructure assets across sectors ranging from power to road and railways.

    Khurshid said the privatisation policy of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance was different from that of the BJP as the UPA government’s strategy was never to sell strategic assets and profit-making companies.

    On the upcoming Uttar Pradesh Assembly polls due next year, Khurshid said as of now, the Congress is focusing on increasing its organisational strength.

    “Presently, the Congress and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra are focusing on increasing our strength in Uttar Pradesh. Yes, we were not very strong organisationally as of now, but the situation has changed in the last few months. We have increased our strength. But as of now, there are no talks of alliance with the Samajwadi Party,” he said.