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Afghanistan LIVE Updates: Women Can't be Ministers, they Should Give Birth, Say Taliban; Insurgents 'Killing Panjshir Youths'

Afghanistan LIVE Updates: Women Can’t be Ministers, they Should Give Birth, Say Taliban; Insurgents ‘Killing Panjshir Youths’

Afghanistan News LIVE Updates: Asking why the planet wasn’t reacting to ‘barbaric’ Taliban, Panjshir Province, which has been fighting the insurgents, said that the militant group is completing door-to-door manhunt and killing people. “100s of family leaving their house after genocide happened previous couple of days. #Taliban starts searching house to deal with , village to village and killing youths. the very fact is we’ll still fight for our freedom. what’s wrong with world? nobody react to the present barbaric Taliban,” people from the resistance force tweeted.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres pleaded with the international community, during an interview with AFP Thursday to take care of a dialogue with the Taliban in Afghanistan, warning that an “economic collapse” with possibly millions dying must be avoided. “We must maintain a dialogue with the Taliban, where we affirm our principles directly — a dialogue with a sense of solidarity with the Afghan people,” he said. “Our duty is to increase our solidarity to nation that suffer greatly, where millions and millions risk dying of hunger,” Guterres added.

Meanwhile, the Hurriyat Conference led by Mirwaiz Umar Farooq on Thursday expressed hope that the formation of the new government in Afghanistan will put an end to four decades of conflict and uncertainty within the country. The Hurriyat said the amalgam understands that no two conflict regions are an equivalent and therefore the differences between Afghanistan and Kashmir are well-known. However, “we in Kashmir can surely empathise with the folk of the country who even have been living during a state of acute uncertainty for 40 years”, it said.

Grief Comes Home to US Towns Week after Afghanistan War Ends | expecting the hearse carrying one among the 13 U.S. service members killed during a bombing in Afghanistan fortnight ago, Faye Hillis considered all the military veterans she had mourned at her hometown’s lone funeral parlor . Her father who came home from war II. Her cousin who died in Vietnam. Too many friends and neighbors to count. “I’m having of these flashbacks,” she said Wednesday as school children, families and veterans lined the village’s two main streets to honor Navy Corpsman Maxton Soviak. While the war in Afghanistan is over, its harsh reality remains coming home as Americans now are starting to honor and bury the last casualties to return back from a 20-year war that claimed quite 2,400 American lives.

 

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