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Pakistan opposes normal Afghanistan–India relations: Shaheen

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Suhail Shaheen, Afghanistan’s ambassador to Qatar, has accused Pakistan of attempting to block Kabul’s normal relations with other countries, including India, and warned of consequences following recent airstrikes.

In an interview with India Today, Shaheen said that Islamabad may have other plans regarding Afghanistan and is using large-scale attacks on civilians as a means of pressure to force Kabul into accepting its demands.

In a separate interview with NDTV, Shaheen strongly condemned what he described as a deadly Pakistani airstrike on a hospital in Kabul, calling it a “crime against humanity.”

More than 400 people were killed and 265 others were injured in Monday’s strike on a drug rehabilitation hospital in Kabul.

He further said that Pakistan is carrying out such strikes under what he described as “baseless claims” of targeting the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which Islamabad accuses of conducting attacks inside Pakistan.

Shaheen also rejected reports of any ongoing back-channel negotiations between Kabul and Islamabad.

“Right now, there are no back-channel talks. They have chosen the military approach, while we always wanted a peaceful solution to issues,” he said. “They chose to attack Afghanistan first. So, I think it will be responded to in their language.”

 

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Interior and Labor Ministers discuss creation of job opportunities

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Sirajuddin Haqqani, the Minister of Interior, met on Saturday with Abdul Manan Omari, the Minister of Labor and Social Affairs, and discussed a number of important issues.

The Ministry of Interior said that the meeting focused on creating job opportunities inside and outside the country. It added that with increased coordination between the two ministries, the movement of workers traveling abroad or returning to the country will be facilitated.

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Public Health Minister inaugurates multiple health projects in northern Afghanistan

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The Ministry of Public Health said on Saturday that Minister Noor Jalal Jalali inaugurated several health projects worth nearly 300 million AFN during his visit to the country’s northern zone.

According to a ministry statement, the foundation stone of a general hospital in Mingajik district of Jawzjan province was laid, with the project valued at more than 50 million AFN.

Construction has also begun on a general hospital in Hazrat Sultan district of Samangan province, estimated at 64 million AFN.

In a separate development, the foundation stone for a general hospital in Kalbad district of Kunduz province was laid at a cost of 48 million AFN.

The ministry added that remaining construction work on a 50-bed hospital in Aqcha district of Jawzjan province has resumed and been inaugurated, with a budget of 54 million AFN.

A neonatal care unit at the provincial hospital in Jawzjan was also inaugurated, costing 14 million AFN.

In addition, a fully equipped 50-bed maternity ward at the provincial hospital in Samangan was opened, with an estimated cost of 60 million AFN.

Meanwhile, a highway health center in Andkhoy district of Jawzjan province was also inaugurated.

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Afghan war crimes report on frontline of new Australian display

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A redacted copy of an inquiry into alleged war crimes by Australian troops in Afghanistan will go on display at the Australian War Memorial as part of a major redevelopment.

Under the museum’s half-a-billion dollar expansion, the report will be included among 1,200 items in a new Afghanistan gallery set to officially open in June, INDAILY reported. 

The Brereton Report, publicly released in late 2020, found credible information that Australian special forces soldiers murdered 39 Afghan civilians and prisoners in 23 incidents. One redacted case was described as “possibly the most disgraceful episode in Australia’s military history”.

Speaking in a documentary on SBS about the memorial’s redevelopment, director Matt Anderson said the Afghanistan gallery would include the more “difficult elements” of Australia’s involvement in the conflict.

“The Australian memorial must acknowledge the fact of the Brereton report,” he said.

“I know from my own time in Afghanistan — 18 months of my life — that some of those I served with say, ‘mate, you can’t put it in here’, because it will cloud their service and sacrifice.

“I’ve had others who say they won’t visit the memorial if I don’t include it, so what I need to do is put it into context.”

Anderson said the inquiry also found the Special Operations Task Group had overwhelmingly served with skill and courage.

“I want people who visit the galleries to understand that outcome of the Brereton report, and to understand the nature of that service over those 20 years — and as a nation and as a veteran to be justifiably proud of that service,” he said.

Victoria Cross recipient Ben Roberts-Smith has been charged with five counts of war crime murder, allegedly committed during his service in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. He denies the accusations and remains on bail.

The Afghanistan gallery is the last to be completed in the renovated Anzac Hall and does not include any altered display relating to Roberts-Smith following his arrest.

However, a panel in the memorial’s Hall of Valour — accompanying his uniform and medals — now includes information about his arrest, noting the “legal process is ongoing”.

The Brereton report will be displayed alongside a copy of the Geneva Conventions, which set out humanitarian standards in conflict, as well as materials outlining rules of engagement for Australian troops, including the lawful use of force and detention.

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