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Minister Barmak Says Intruder Was Involved in Kabul Hotel Attack

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(Last Updated On: October 25, 2022)

Afghan interior minister, Wais Ahmad Barmak, on Monday claimed that infiltrators have cooperated with six Taliban assailants during a deadly attack on Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel.

“According to the initial investigations, it is impossible for a group of six suicide attackers to enter into the hotel without the help of an intruder,” Mr. Barmak said.

He confirmed an intelligence weakness when asked how the insurgents were able to penetrate security at one of the most prominent landmarks in Kabul.

Two eyewitnesses who have survived the attack claimed that security machines and baggage scanners were disabled before the attack took place.

Zemaray Hamdard, who was at the hotel to attend an IT conference when gunmen burst into the hotel, told Ariana News that the hotel baggage scanners were turned off in advance and the assailants had entered through main checkpoints.

“The equipments were entered through the main checkpoints, when I came to the hotel at two o’clock with my colleagues. We had twenty bags and no one searched our bags. The scanners were off,” Mr. Hamdard said.

Sayed Zakarya, a government employee with a broken leg because he had jumped from the second floor of the hotel during the attack, said that the dead toll was more than 60 people.

“I witnessed that they were killing people by calling Allah ho Akbar. People jumped down from the third and fourth floor,” Mr. Hamdard described the terrifying moment.

Twenty hours after the attack, ambulances were seen waiting for victims in front of the hotel and an old man was still searching his missing family member.

On Monday, the five-star hotel still remained blocked off where the reporters were not allowed in by the security forces and even the final casualty toll remains unclear.

By Hesamuddin Hesam & Fawad Naseri

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IEA sets up delegation over Badakhshan protests

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(Last Updated On: May 5, 2024)

The Islamic Emirate has announced the appointment of a delegation headed by Chief of the Army Staff Fasihuddin Fitrah, amid protests in Badakhshan province over the killing of a local resident by security forces during poppy crackdown.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, emphasized in a statement that the decree banning poppy cultivation extends to all regions without exception.

“Regrettably, there have been incidents where offenders attempted to attack the security forces involved in the fight against poppy cultivation, resulting in tragic events,” he said.

The delegation includes Shamsuddin Shariati, the head of overseeing and monitoring directives and commands, Mullah Abdul Haq, deputy minister of narcotics control, Mullah Rahmatullah Najib, deputy general director of intelligence, and Abdul Momin, chairman of the Badakhshan Ulema Council.

Darayem district of Badakhshan has seen protests against the Islamic Emirate in recent days.

The Ministry of Interior has confirmed that one of the local people was killed in a clash with the forces tasked to destroy poppy fields in the district.

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Terrorist threats to US interests from Afghanistan, Pakistan steadily rising: USIP

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(Last Updated On: May 4, 2024)

Following the concerns over terrorist threats from Afghanistan, the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) says in a report that terrorist threats against US interests from Afghanistan and Pakistan are steadily rising.

The report stated that “Afghanistan presents growing space for terrorist groups compared to the period before the U.S. withdrawal.”

“ISIS-K [Daesh] presents a rising threat with reach beyond the immediate region, greater than during the pre-withdrawal period,” the report reads.

It added that “The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) terrorist group has also returned as a regional security threat.”

“The study group’s final report evaluated and put forth policy options to mitigate terrorist threats and safeguard U.S. interests in Afghanistan and Pakistan, while maintaining the current focus on strategic competition,” the report added.

“Unfortunately, the geography of Afghanistan and the relations of terrorist groups in the region have caused the countries of the region and the world to express concern about possible challenges. The Islamic Emirate should take measures to form an inclusive government so that the spirit of the regional fight against terrorism is practically strengthened and launched,” said a military expert.

Meanwhile, the Islamic Emirate has called the report “baseless” and said that it has no relationship with al-Qaeda and that Daesh has been suppressed in Afghanistan.

IEA’s deputy spokesman Hamdullah Fetrat added that there is no terrorist group in Afghanistan and the government does not allow Afghan soil to be used against other countries.

“The Islamic Emirate has repeatedly said that Afghanistan’s soil will not be used against the interests of countries. Once again, we assure the countries of the world and the region that Afghanistan’s soil will not be used against their interests, nor is Afghanistan a threat to them,” Fetrat stressed.

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Afghan prisoner stabs inmate to death in Delhi

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(Last Updated On: May 4, 2024)

An Afghan prisoner in Delhi stabbed another prisoner to death on Friday after a dispute over food, the Times of India reported.

The deceased was identified as Deepak Soni, who was 29-year-old.

The killer has been identified as Abdul Basir Akhundzada who is 44 years old.

Abdul Basir Akhundzadeh had been arrested in connection with a case of attempted murder in Lajpet Nagar area of New Delhi in 2019.

Soni had been arrested in connection with the case of robbery and murder in 2018.

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