Millions of Afghan refugees are being expelled across the globe, and that number keeps climbing day by day.
In host countries, they are facing arbitrary arrests and family separations; upon return, they are facing human rights violations amidst one of the most severe humanitarian crisis in the world.
#BREAKING
Sources have confirmed to TOLOnews that the Pakistani military has once again carried out missile attacks in Asadabad city, the center of Kunar province.
According to the sources, the dormitory of Kunar University was also targeted in these attacks.
It is said that most of the victims are civilians, including women and children, but there is no confirmed information yet about the exact number of casualties.
Official sources have not yet commented on the matter.
#TOLOnews_English
Pakistani authorities have sharply escalated abusive raids, arbitrary detentions, and forced returns of Afghan refugees following renewed border clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Police operations have left thousands of already vulnerable Afghan refugees, including children, facing serious barriers to health care, education, and other essential services.
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Nations and Their Source of Dollars :
๐ฎ๐ณ India โ IT services & Medicines
๐บ๐ธ USA โ Defence & Oil
๐ฆ๐ซ Afghanistan โ Agriculture (Dry Fruits & Saffron)
๐ฏ๐ต Japan โ Electronic Items
๐ต๐ฐ Pakistan - Exporting Soldiers to Saudi Arabia & Girls to China ๐ฏ
๐ง๐ฉ Bangladesh - โ๏ธ
๐น๐ผ Taiwan - Semiconductors
๐ซ๐ท France โ Tourism
๐ท๐บ Russia โ Oil & Defence
๐ฑ๐ฐ Sri Lanka โ Tea Exports
๐ฐ Afghans comb riverbed in search of gold dust
Hundreds of men dig into the rocky bed of the Kunar River in eastern Afghanistan, searching for a few grams of gold dust as an alternative source of income.
This hospital at the centre of a child HIV outbreak in Pakistan is caught reusing syringes in a BBC investigation.
๐บ Watch the full documentary on our YouTube channel: https://t.co/5yUuOtrmZx
What a shame! Doctors in Pakistan reuse contaminated syringes on children, causing hundreds of kids to contract HIV, some from the same family.
This genuinely makes your blood boil. Imagine being a parent and finding out your child did not get infected because of fate, but because someone could not be bothered to use a clean syringe. That is not poverty or lack of resources, that is simply filth, laziness, and a complete absence of fear of consequences. And what makes it even more damning is that this is happening in Punjab, Pakistanโs most populated and supposedly most developed province, basically the heart of the country. If this is the condition there, just imagine what must be happening in Balochistan, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, or in the backward belts of Sindh, where marginalised minority communities, including Hindus, are effectively confined and forgotten. This is what a broken system looks like, where the powerful survive and the vulnerable get handed a life sentence through a syringe. Pakistan can either make an example out of the culprits and clean up its healthcare sector, or keep pretending this is unfortunate while its children keep paying the price.