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Protesters accused NUG for being reckless on 31 abducted passengers
Afghan government and Parliament members are reckless about the 31 passengers whom are being kidnapped in Ghazni, protesters said.
Families of the 31 men who were abducted in Zabul province of Afghanistan about two months ago demonstrated on Saturday in front of the Afghan Parliament saying that the government is very careless about our beloveds and they will be responsible for any consequences.
Zulfaqar Omid leader of labor and development party said,” Fifty seven days have passed from the national disaster in Ghazni and our gatherings are useless, we have staged in front of the nation’s house with no answers to our questions, the government must not discriminate between the citizens”.
Aqbal Ali Muzafari who is the relative of one of the abductees said,” we are asking the government to find a solution for our relatives being kidnapped by unknown gunmen, and the government must provide the pained relatives looking for their beloveds with satisfactory answers”.
While a number of the Lawmakers insist that they will not bare any efforts to help the kidnappers release the passengers.
Lawmaker Baktash Siawash angrily said,” Our city has been changed to house with no owner, anything happens and there is no one to answer”.
“We have discussed this issue in the Lower House and the House speaker tasked internal and defensive committee to follow this issue seriously,” Another MP Mohammad Reza Khoshak Watandost highlighted.
Protesters staged in front of the Afghan Parliament after another group of kidnappers beheaded four people in Malistan district of Ghazni.
Four death bodies were buried today and the participants asked the government to find and trial the kidnappers.
Shazya Ashrafee a member of the New Generation Network said,” We are demanding the government to identify and punish the perpetrators who kidnapped these four residents of Malistan district of Ghazni and then beheaded”.
Afghans were hopeful about peace and reconciliations with the anti-government armed militant groups, but after the New Year Afghan disappointed again and the insurgents increased their brutality across the country by kidnaps, beheadings and suicide attacks.
Reported by: Rafi Sediqi
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Trump: U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan ‘looked like running’
U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday sharply criticized the military withdrawal from Afghanistan carried out under the Joe Biden administration, saying it “looked like running.”
Speaking to active-duty soldiers at Fort Bragg Army Base in North Carolina, Trump said the withdrawal left behind U.S. military equipment and tarnished America’s image.
“We wouldn’t have left anything. We would have left with dignity, strength and respect. We looked like we were running. We don’t run from anybody,” Trump said. “That was a Biden embarrassment. What a terrible president.”
Trump’s remarks reiterate his ongoing criticism of the Biden administration’s handling of Afghanistan, particularly the chaotic final days of the U.S. military presence.
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Trump aide: Efforts continue to free Americans detained in Afghanistan
Sebastian Gorka, Deputy Assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, reaffirmed on X that the Trump administration is actively pressing the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) to release American detainees.
“President Trump has made it clear that the Taliban (IEA) must cease their hostage-taking, or there will be consequences,” Gorka said. “We will not rest until Dennis Coyle and Mahmood Habibi come home.”
The IEA has denied detaining Habibi, who formerly served as head of Afghanistan’s civil aviation authority.
Over the past year, five American detainees have been released from Afghanistan. According to the New York Times, the IEA has demanded the release of the last Afghan prisoner held at Guantanamo Bay in exchange for freeing two American detainees in Afghanistan.
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Former Pakistani diplomats urge dialogue with Afghanistan
Former Pakistani diplomats, speaking at a roundtable discussion in Islamabad, underscored the importance of sustained dialogue with Afghanistan to address bilateral differences.
The discussion, organized on Friday by the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad, highlighted that the current situation in Afghanistan has direct consequences for regional security and stability. Participants stressed that constructive engagement and regular communication are the only viable pathways to resolving existing challenges.
The former diplomats pointed out that relations between Afghanistan and Pakistan are deeply interconnected, and any strain between the two sides inevitably impacts the wider region.
They further emphasized that building trust, enhancing practical cooperation, and fostering mutual understanding are essential prerequisites for achieving lasting regional stability.
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