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Pakistan voices concern of ‘terror threats’ linked to Afghanistan
Pakistan has urged the UN Security Council to take stronger action against alleged terrorist groups it says are operating from sanctuaries inside Afghanistan.
Addressing a Council meeting on Afghanistan on Tuesday, Pakistan’s permanent representative to the UN, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmed, named groups including Al Qaeda, IS-Khorasan (Daesh), Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), and Baloch insurgents such as the BLA and Majeed Brigade as active threats across the border.
He said militant networks pose the gravest threat to its national security.
“We have credible evidence of collaboration among these groups through joint training, illicit weapons trade, refuge to terrorists, and coordinated attacks,” Ahmed claimed.
He also stated that more than 60 militant camps currently serve as hubs for infiltration into Pakistan, targeting civilians, security forces, and development projects.
In addition, Ahmed claimed that the threat extends into cyberspace, citing nearly 70 propaganda accounts linked to Afghan IP addresses spreading extremist messaging.
He called on social media platforms to work more closely with governments to curb online extremist networks.
Ahmed also highlighted Pakistan and China’s joint request to the Security Council’s 1267 Sanctions Committee to formally designate the BLA and Majeed Brigade as terrorist organizations. He pressed the Council to act swiftly.
Turning to the TTP, Ahmed described it as the largest UN-designated group operating in Afghanistan, with nearly 6,000 fighters. He said Pakistan had prevented multiple infiltration attempts and seized caches of advanced military equipment left behind after the international
withdrawal from Afghanistan. “These efforts come at a heavy price … just this month, 12 Pakistani soldiers were martyred in a single incident,” he noted.
Ahmed’s remarks came just days after Afghanistan’s Defense Minister, Mohammad Yaqoub Mujahid, rejected claims that Afghan territory is being used to threaten other nations. Speaking to Al Jazeera, Mujahid said the Islamic Emirate remains committed to the Doha Agreement with the United States and that Afghan soil will not be misused against any country.
“No one can provide evidence that the United States, its allies, or any other country has been threatened from Afghanistan during this period,” Mujahid said. He added that while Afghanistan has no military agreements with any state, the government’s policy is to prevent its territory from being used against neighbors.
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Central Asia and Afghanistan are key security concerns for CSTO: Lavrov
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Monday that security risks in Central Asia and developments in Afghanistan are among the primary concerns for the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).
The CSTO is a regional military alliance that includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.
Speaking in Moscow during a meeting with CSTO Secretary-General Taalatbek Masadykov, Lavrov described the region’s security challenges as “central” to the organization’s agenda.
“The problems that are currently among the central ones for the CSTO are new challenges and threats. I am referring to the situation in the Central Asian region of collective security, as well as everything related to what is happening in Afghanistan,” he said.
He praised Masadykov as “one of the leading experts” on Central Asian security, noting that his experience could enhance coordination and increase the effectiveness of allied actions.
Similar to NATO, the CSTO considers an attack on one member state as an attack on all.
Countries in the region have always expressed concern about security threats from Afghanistan. The Islamic Emirate, however, has dismissed these concerns and assured that it will not allow Afghanistan’s soil to be used against another country.
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Afghanistan to establish first-ever faculty of ‘prophetic medicine’
The Ministry of Higher Education of Afghanistan has announced that the leader of the Islamic Emirate has approved the establishment of a faculty dedicated to “Prophetic Medicine.”
According to the ministry, this new faculty will play a vital role in advancing medical sciences and training skilled healthcare professionals across the country.
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Renovation of Afghanistan–Iran border markers to begin in the near future
Afghanistan’s Minister of Borders and Tribal Affairs, Noorullah Noori, has announced that the long-delayed demarcation and renovation of border markers along the Afghanistan–Iran frontier will officially begin in the near future.
According to a statement from the ministry, Noori made the remarks during a meeting with Iran’s ambassador to Kabul, Ali-Reza Bikdeli.
He assured the Iranian side that the Islamic Emirate is fully committed to accelerating the process and resolving any challenges that may arise during implementation.
In a separate statement, the Iranian Embassy in Kabul said Bikdeli underscored the importance of bilateral cooperation on border issues, describing it as a key factor in strengthening and expanding overall relations between the two countries.
Officials from both sides agreed nearly three months ago to resume the border-marker renovation project, which had remained stalled for the past seven years.
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