With homes destroyed and no shelter, villagers in Gurbuz District face cold nights, hunger, and fear as cross-border attacks continue. https://t.co/Y0TTGxCjIr via @theaftimes
Saeedullah Safi: The Silence of Afghan Girls’ Classrooms Enters Its Fifth Year
Five Years of Silence, 1,645 Days of Denial: Afghan Girls Still Barred from Classrooms
https://t.co/kx5FzolqzL
Bodies of Female Doctor and Son Unrecovered as Pakistani Forces Fire on Retrieval Attempts
More than 24 hours after the killing, residents say the bodies remain at the site
https://t.co/pnIpBOM2B8
Bodies of Female Doctor and Son Unrecovered as Pakistani Forces Fire on Retrieval Attempts
More than 24 hours after the killing, residents say the bodies remain at the site
https://t.co/pnIpBOM2B8
This is a fabricated claim. Afghan Times has not reported this. Don’t be misled by false narratives. Our only official account is @theaftimes — any other accounts are fake and misleading.
More information has come to light since the claims were made. Drug addicts were often used as fodder for su/c/de b0mbing.
Makes sense because no one in their right mind goes to work thinking “hey, maybe I’ll explode today”
I spoke at the European Parliament today about what Afghans are actually living through.
Pakistan bombs our civilians.
The Taliban erase our women.
The world debates while Afghans bury their dead.
Watch. Share. This is the truth they don’t want amplified.
Deeply concerned about the situation unfolding in Afghanistan.
My heartfelt thoughts are with the victims, families, and all those affected by the recent incident on the Omid Drug Rehabilitation Facility in Kabul.
I extend my solidarity to the Afghan Red Crescent @ARCSAfghanistan teams on the ground providing critical support.
A mother searches for her son, a doctor at Kabul’s drug treatment hospital, still unable to find his body after a Pakistani airstrike.
Ziarmal of Shamshad TV reports from Kabul.
#afghanistan#kabul
At least 400 people were killed in an airstrike by Pakistan on a drug rehabilitation facility in Afghanistan’s capital on Monday, an Afghan official said Tuesday https://t.co/pEkcF3XHw9
After recent airstrikes on a drug rehabilitation hospital in #Kabul, hundreds were left wounded.
In response, @ICRC delivered emergency medical supplies to Wazir Akbar Khan Hospital, supporting health workers to treat the injured and save lives when every moment counts.
We’ve spent the past 24 hours reporting on the aftermath of the Pakistani airstrike that hit a former U.S. base last night, home to a drug rehabilitation center.
My colleague @SAFIPADSHAH saw at least 75 bodies. A initial assessment from a U.N. Agency which we obtained said 180 people were killed. Afghan officials put the death toll at over 400.
Pakistan, as of tonight, maintains it hit a military target. The drug rehab facility was widely recognised as such among locals.
From our story:
“Though Pakistan’s ultimate objective remains unclear, it has pummeled Afghan military infrastructure with strikes that have also hit or damaged civilian homes, refugee camps and health facilities, according to the United Nations.
The United States has said that Pakistan has a right to defend itself — a stance that Pakistani officials have said privately that they interpret as a green light to conduct their operations. Pakistan has ignored calls for dialogue from China, its primary partner, despite public mediation efforts over the past week.”
https://t.co/9btuhaxgzJ
No. No. No.
Hundreds killed in a Pakistani airstrike on a Kabul hospital.
First the BBC downplayed it - now @BBCNews removed it from the front page entirely.
If Israel were involved, it would lead for days but no - the BBC must not talk badly about Pakistan.
Why is that?
Hundreds of civilians were killed in Kabul, yet the report only states “Pakistan denies.” This framing risks minimizing the human tragedy—facts, not official denials, should guide reporting. @Independent_ie@SJAMcBride , can this be corrected?
Pakistan just killed hundreds of civilians in an airstrike in Kabul, according to the Taliban-run Afghan government. The world is beset by crises. Few know that Pakistan, a nuclear state, and Afghanistan are in a widening armed conflict. @nytimes story: https://t.co/QRmBak0Qqc
I am deeply alarmed by reports of an attack on the Omid Drug Rehabilitation Facility in #Kabul, with more than 400 people reportedly killed and hundreds more injured. During my multiple visits to #Afghanistan, I met people in centres like this, often among the most vulnerable, seeking support and treatment. They are individuals in need of health services and must never be exposed to harm.
Facilities providing care for substance use disorders are an essential part of the health system and must be protected, like all health services. Health care is not a target. All facilities, health workers and patients must be protected, without exception.
UN health agency @WHO calls for peace after reported Pakistani strike on health centre kills at least 400 people in Afghanistan.
https://t.co/2WCerDityq