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After Afghanistan Earthquake, Women Tell of Being Shunned by Male Rescuers

4 septembre 2025 à 20:47
A prohibition on contact between unrelated women and men meant many women’s wounds went untended and some were left trapped under rubble after a deadly earthquake, witnesses said.

© Agence France-Presse via Getty Images

“It felt like women were invisible,” one volunteer said after witnessing rescue efforts in eastern Afghanistan.

After Afghanistan Quake, Women Tell of Being Shunned by Male Rescuers

4 septembre 2025 à 13:09
A prohibition on contact between unrelated women and men meant many women’s wounds went untended and some were left trapped under rubble after a deadly earthquake, witnesses said.

© Agence France-Presse via Getty Images

“It felt like women were invisible,” one volunteer said after witnessing rescue efforts in eastern Afghanistan.

After Deadly Earthquake in Afghanistan, Emergency Aid Trickles In

2 septembre 2025 à 20:06
Villages remain cut off in the remote, mountainous areas in the east that have been hardest hit by the disaster, which has killed at least 1,400 people.

© Safiullah Padshah/The New York Times

Afghan villagers on Tuesday carried the body of a woman killed in the village of Shamraz two days earlier.

En Afghanistan, un séisme a tué des centaines de personnes 

1 septembre 2025 à 20:46

Un tremblement de terre de magnitude 6, suivi de plusieurs répliques, a fait au moins 800 morts et plus de 2700 blessés, selon un bilan encore provisoire hier.  

L’épicentre du séisme a été localisé près de Jalalabad, une ville située à 150 km à l’est de Kaboul, la capitale afghane. 

L’Afghanistan est fréquemment frappé par des séismes parce que le pays se trouve sur une zone de jonction entre les plaques tectoniques eurasienne et indienne.

  • En octobre 2023, un séisme de magnitude 6,3 avait tué près de 1500 personnes dans l’ouest du pays.

[L'article En Afghanistan, un séisme a tué des centaines de personnes  a d'abord été publié dans InfoBref.]

Searching the Rubble After Afghanistan’s Deadly Earthquake

1 septembre 2025 à 17:27
Hundreds of people were killed and at least 2,500 others were injured in a difficult to reach mountainous region. Officials warned many more people may still be awaiting rescue.

© Sayed Hassib/Reuters

What to Know About the Earthquake in Afghanistan

2 septembre 2025 à 06:58
At least 1,400 people were killed and more than 3,100 others injured, according to the Afghan authorities, and the death toll was expected to rise.

© Wahidullah Kakar/Associated Press

A military helicopter in Afghanistan’s Kunar Province on Monday carried people injured in the earthquake.

Afghanistan Earthquake Leaves More Than 800 Dead

1 septembre 2025 à 11:58
The quake, near the border with Pakistan, injured more than 2,500 people in mountainous areas that rescue workers took hours to reach.

© Hedayat Shah/Associated Press

Preparing to evacuate injured victims in Mazar Dara on Monday.

The ‘Economic Storm’ of Crises That Is Battering Afghanistan

30 août 2025 à 10:22
Afghanistan was on a timid recovery path. But four years after the Taliban retook power, it has been badly hit by aid cuts and an inflow of two million Afghans forced out of Iran and Pakistan.

© Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

In Kabul, Afghanistan, last month.

The ‘Economic Storm’ of Crises That Is Battering Afghanistan

30 août 2025 à 00:01
Afghanistan was on a timid recovery path. But four years after the Taliban retook power, it has been badly hit by aid cuts and an inflow of two million Afghans forced out of Iran and Pakistan.

© Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times

In Kabul, Afghanistan, last month.
  • ✇The Kyiv Independent
  • ICC issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders as Russia recognizes their legitimacy
    The International Criminal Court (ICC) said on July 8 that it had issued arrest warrants for two senior Taliban leaders, accusing them of crimes against humanity and gender-based persecution following the group's takeover of Afghanistan in 2021. The move follows Russia's recognition of the Taliban as Afghanistan's legitimate government on July 3. Russia, which had previously designated the Taliban as a banned terrorist group, became the first country in the world to recognize it. In a statement,
     

ICC issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders as Russia recognizes their legitimacy

8 juillet 2025 à 15:18
ICC issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders as Russia recognizes their legitimacy

The International Criminal Court (ICC) said on July 8 that it had issued arrest warrants for two senior Taliban leaders, accusing them of crimes against humanity and gender-based persecution following the group's takeover of Afghanistan in 2021.

The move follows Russia's recognition of the Taliban as Afghanistan's legitimate government on July 3. Russia, which had previously designated the Taliban as a banned terrorist group, became the first country in the world to recognize it.

In a statement, the ICC named Taliban supreme leader Haibatullah Akhundzada and Afghanistan's top judge Abdul Hakim Haqqani as suspects in a campaign of systematic oppression targeting women, girls, and others who do not conform to the group's rigid gender ideology.

The court said the alleged crimes took place across Afghanistan from the Taliban's return to power on August 15, 2021, and continued at least until Jan. 20, 2025. The suspects are believed to have played key roles in the enforcement of Taliban policies that led to "murder, imprisonment, torture, rape and enforced disappearance."

The persecution was not limited to women and girls, according to the ICC. The court said that men perceived as allies of women or opponents of Taliban ideology were also targeted.

The ICC emphasized that the Taliban implemented a state-led policy of repression that violated fundamental human rights and freedoms across the country.

Most of the international community has refused to formally recognize the Taliban regime due to its human rights abuses and failure to meet international standards.

Meanwhile, since Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 the Kremlin has deepened relationships with authoritarian regimes, including North Korea, Iran, and now the Taliban. Russia has expanded trade with Afghanistan and allowed Taliban officials to participate in Russian forums.

In December 2024, the Russian State Duma passed a law allowing certain groups, including the Taliban, to be removed from the country's list of banned terrorist organizations. The move paved the way for official recognition.

Putin has referred to the Taliban as "allies," and Lavrov has called them "sane people," despite the group's ongoing enforcement of strict Islamic law, including gender apartheid, public executions, and bans on women's education.

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ICC issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders as Russia recognizes their legitimacyThe Kyiv IndependentDr. Gary E Myers
ICC issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders as Russia recognizes their legitimacy
  • ✇The Kyiv Independent
  • Russia becomes first country to recognize Afghanistan's Taliban government
    Russia became the first country to recognize the Taliban as the ruling government of Afghanistan on July 3, Russia's Foreign Ministry announced."We believe that the act of official recognition of the government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will give impetus to the development of productive bilateral cooperation between our countries in various fields," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.The Taliban, an Islamist militant group, seized control of Afghanistan in August 2021 following
     

Russia becomes first country to recognize Afghanistan's Taliban government

3 juillet 2025 à 16:22
Russia becomes first country to recognize Afghanistan's Taliban government

Russia became the first country to recognize the Taliban as the ruling government of Afghanistan on July 3, Russia's Foreign Ministry announced.

"We believe that the act of official recognition of the government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will give impetus to the development of productive bilateral cooperation between our countries in various fields," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The Taliban, an Islamist militant group, seized control of Afghanistan in August 2021 following the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO forces, toppling the Western-backed government.

Despite its control over the country, the Taliban-led administration has not been formally recognized by any other state due to its failure to meet international commitments on human rights, governance, and counter-terrorism.

Russian state media outlet TASS reported that Russian President Vladimir Putin made the final decision based on advice from Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

As relations with Western governments fell apart following Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Kremlin has increasingly looked to work closely with totalitarian regimes, including North Korea and Iran, to advance economic and military partnerships.

In recent years, Moscow has expanded engagement with the Taliban, deepening trade ties and investing in Afghan infrastructure. The Taliban also regularly participates in Russian economic and educational forums.

In recent months, Russia's Supreme Court ruled to suspend the ban on dealings with the Taliban, and Russia's State Duma passed legislation in December 2024 allowing the possibility of removing organizations from the list of banned terrorist groups.

Putin has previously referred to the Taliban as "allies," while Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has called them "sane people."

The Taliban, however, continues to enforce strict Islamic law, banning women from education, restricting social interactions, and carrying out the public stoning of women to death.

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Russia becomes first country to recognize Afghanistan's Taliban governmentThe Kyiv IndependentThe Kyiv Independent news desk
Russia becomes first country to recognize Afghanistan's Taliban government




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