Amu: An anti-Taliban group briefly seized control of Yaftal-e-Paeen district in Afghanistan’s northeastern Badakhshan province early Friday before withdrawing several hours later, local sources told Amu TV. According to the sources, the fighters identified themselves as a newly formed group calling itself “Sepahian-e Mihan” (Soldiers of the Homeland) and raised the group’s flag over the district administration building during the takeover. The sources said the fighters later withdrew from the district. Click here to read more (external link).
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8am: As the population grows and the weather turns warmer, several residents of Herat province are criticizing the shortage of garbage bins in many parts of the city. According to them, the lack of adequate bins has led some residents to dump their waste in drainage channels, ditches, and public spaces because they have no suitable place to dispose of it. Residents say the municipality also fails to collect the garbage on time. As a result, with water stagnating in the drainage channels and waste rotting in the heat, a foul stench spreads across the city, and the number of mosquitoes rises, disrupting the daily lives and health of residents. Meanwhile, several environmental experts warn that poor waste management not only harms the city’s appearance and the environment but also pollutes the air, soil, and water, creating conditions for the spread of various diseases.
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Khaama: Six Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives have called on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to release the full autopsy report of an Afghan refugee who died after being taken into U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, while seeking information about the detention and deportation of other former Afghan partners of the United States. According to the lawmakers, Paktiawal was arrested by ICE officers on March 13 while taking his children to school. They said he had no criminal convictions and had a documented history of assisting U.S. Special Forces during the war in Afghanistan.
The Guardian (UK): Child marriage is not new to south Asia. But while the practice across the region has been declining, the Taliban takeover reversed that trend in Afghanistan. Shabnam*, a midwife, says: “Since the new government came to power, the number of child mothers has increased dramatically. In the past, perhaps only two child mothers visited the hospital each month, most of whom were from illiterate families. But now, literate and illiterate families marry off their daughters at a young age.” 