News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News
News from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
RAWA News


 

 

 





 


 


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  • March 26, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Seven Afghan civilians killed in NATO air strike
    AFP: Seven civilians, three of them children, were killed and five others wounded in a NATO air strike targeting insurgents in restive southern Afghanistan, a local official said Saturday. The governor of Helmand province said the two men, two women and three children died when the car they were travelling in was hit by NATO fire late Friday.      Full news...

  • March 24, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Local official: NATO airstrike kills Afghan child
    UPI: NATO said Thursday it will investigate a police claim a NATO helicopter gunship targeting terrorists killed a child in the eastern Afghan Khost province. Coalition forces opened fire from the attack helicopter on a car carrying a group of suspected Haqqani network terrorists Wednesday but accidentally hit another vehicle, killing the child, Khost Police Chief Abdul Hakim Esahaqaai told reporters.      Full news...

  • March 23, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Their empty talk of liberating Afghan women
    SocialistWorker.org: IT SEEMS like a ludicrous claim now, but when the U.S. invaded Afghanistan nearly 10 years ago in the “war on terror,” one of the most potent justifications was to liberate Afghan women. George W. Bush lined up a group of influential women, including his wife Laura and liberal feminist organizations like the Feminist Majority Foundation, to press the case...      Full news...


  • March 21, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    US Army “kill team” in Afghanistan posed for photos of murdered civilians
    The Guardian: Commanders in Afghanistan are bracing themselves for possible riots and public fury triggered by the publication of “trophy” photographs of US soldiers posing with the dead bodies of defenceless Afghan civilians they killed. Senior officials at Nato’s International Security Assistance Force in Kabul have compared the pictures published by the German news weekly Der Spiegel to the images of US soldiers abusing prisoners in Abu Ghraib in Iraq which sparked waves of anti-US protests around the world.      Full news...

  • March 18, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Revealed: Afghan chief accused of campaign of terror is on US payroll
    The Independent: An Afghan warlord backed by US special forces faces persistent allegations that he launched a two-year spate of violence involving burglary, rape and murder of civilians, desecration of mosques and mutilation of corpses. Yet, despite repeated warnings about the atrocities Commander Azizullah is alleged to have committed, he has remained on the payroll of the US military...      Full news...

  • March 17, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Iran Accused of Deporting Afghan Children
    IWPR: Abdul Majid, 12, sits crying quietly in a corner of the Ansar refugee camp in Herat province. He is alone in Afghanistan; his parents and seven siblings are all back in the Iran. He said he was out with some friends in a park near his home in Semnan province one evening when he was detained. Weeping bitterly, Abdul Majid said he did not know anyone in Afghanistan.      Full news...


  • March 16, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Night raids by US Special Forces anger Afghans
    GlobalPost: It was two o’clock in the morning on Feb. 15. Mullah Abdul Khaliq, who taught at a local school here in Nawa district, was asleep with his family when the helicopters began circling overhead. “We could not leave our houses,” said Abdullah, a neighbor of Mullah Khaliq’s.      Full news...

  • March 14, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Cry against gender violence in Afghanistan
    The Japan Times: Self-immolation committed by a large number of Afghan women is one of the most tragic responses to gender violence in that country. Aside from the horror of dying, surviving this act makes victims unfit for a normal life. They are often permanently maimed, disfigured and shunned by their communities.      Full news...

  • March 14, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    37 killed, 40 injured in Kunduz suicide attack
    Reuters: A suicide attack on an army recruitment centre in northern Afghanistan has killed 37 people. It was the third major assault in the area in less than a month, the deputy governor said. A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for the attack on behalf of the militant Islamist group. Dozens more were wounded, officials said.      Full news...

  • March 13, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    ISAF vehicle crushes child to death
    PAN: A vehicle of foreign troops traveling in a convoy crushed to death a child in southern Kandahar province, an official said on Sunday. The incident took place in the Chawni area of Kandahar City, the provincial capital, on Saturday afternoon, Zalmay Ayubi, the governor’s spokesman, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...

  • March 12, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    ISAF soldiers kill civilians, residents claim
    PAN: An investigation has been launched to determine whether the victims were civilians or militants, the governor’s spokesman, Ahmad Zia Abdulzai, told Pajhwok Afghan News. The men, who were killed in the overnight operation in Gul Bagh area on the outskirts of Jalalabad, were brothers, said a tribal elder, Ghulam Nabi.      Full news...

  • March 11, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    4 Afghans lose ears to Taliban because of development project jobs
    Deutsche Presse Agentur: Taliban militants cut off the ears of four Afghans working for a government-funded development project in the southern province of Kandahar, the provincial government said Thursday. The militants on Wednesday detained eight people, including four children, who all work for the development project in the Zhari district, a statement issued by the governor’s office said.      Full news...

  • March 10, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Police chief says ISAF killed woman in Kunduz
    PAN: One woman died and another was injured when soldiers from the NATO-led coalition opened fire in the northern province of Kunduz, officials said. The International Security Assistance Force said it was investigating the incident, but that a preliminary report showed the two women were over a kilometer away from where the firing took place.      Full news...

  • March 10, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    U.N. alarmed by surge in civilian casualties in Afghanistan
    The Washington Post: A sharp jump in assassinations and a rise in suicide and roadside bombings in Afghanistan last year led to an increase in civilian casualties, the United Nations said Wednesday. The United Nations documented 2,777 civilian deaths in 2010, which it said was a 15 percent rise over the number killed in fighting the previous year.      Full news...

  • March 10, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Rebels kill father, son on spying charge
    PAN: Insurgents shot dead a man and his son on the charge of spying for the government in Khashrod district of southwestern Nimroz province, officials said on Thursday. The two were gunned down while returning home from a mosque, the provincial police chief, Abdul Jabbar Purdali, told Pajhwok Afghan News. The father, 50, and his son, 18, had no links to the government, he said.      Full news...

  • March 8, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    People in Kunduz rise against the cruelties of local militias
    PAN (Translated by RAWA): A number of people in Kunduz claim that local militias take their money and mobile phones forcefully and in some cases even beat them up. They say that although this province has been cleared of armed anti-government forces, the people will distance themselves from the government if things continued this way, thus paving the way for the insurgents to return. The people demanded the government to dissolve this illegal force.      Full news...

  • March 8, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Taliban claims attack on female police officer
    PAN: Taliban fighters on Tuesday claimed responsibility for an attack on a female police official in the western province of Herat. Gunmen on motorcycles shot and wounded 2nd Lt. Maryam, head of a police recruitment centre, after she left her home in Paen Aab and went out of the city.      Full news...

  • March 7, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghan Women’s Desperate Cry for Help
    TheWip: The great number of Afghan women who commit self-immolation (burning oneself to death) is one of the most tragic responses to gender violence in that country. Aside from the horror of dying, surviving this act makes its victims unfit for a normal life. They are often permanently maimed, disfigured, and shunned by their communities.      Full news...

  • March 7, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Failing in Afghanistan successfully
    Al Jazeera: While we have been fixated on successive Arab breakthroughs and victories against tyranny and extremism, Washington is failing miserably but discreetly in Afghanistan. The American media’s one-obsession-at-a-time coverage of global affairs might have put the spotlight on President Obama’s slow and poor reaction to the breathtaking developments starting in Tunisia and Egypt.      Full news...

  • March 6, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Child air-strike deaths stir fury in Afghanistan
    AFP: Two of Nasim’s sons went into the hills to collect firewood last week to warm the family’s humble home against the biting Afghan winter chill. They never returned, killed along with seven other children in a NATO air strike. “The Americans are wild,” said the boys’ father, who uses only one name and whose sons were aged 11 and 12, crying as he spoke. “They don't value humanity and don’t care about our children.      Full news...

  • March 4, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan War Not Worth the Burning of Children and Treasure
    The Huffington Post: Fresh from the reported killing of more than 60 civilians, U.S. forces in Kunar Province, Afghanistan, killed nine boys gathering firewood on a mountainside. General Petraeus says he’s sorry. Too little, too late, general. Nine boys now lie among thousands of others who had a right to life independent of U.S. goals in Afghanistan, and “sorry” doesn’t cut it, especially from the general who's tripling the air war over Afghanistan.      Full news...


  • March 3, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghans Protest NATO Air-Strike Deaths
    RFE/RL: Hundreds of Afghan protesters poured into the streets of the northeastern provincial capital Assad-Abad on March 2 over the death of nine civilians killed in a NATO air strike, RFE/RL’s Radio Free Afghanistan reports. NATO officially apologized on March 2 for what it called an “accident.” It said in a statement that "[the NATO-led] International Security Assistance Force apologizes...      Full news...

  • March 2, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Police chief confirms 9 children killed in ISAF raid
    PAN: The chief of police in eastern Kunar province on Wednesday confirmed that nine children had been killed in a NATO-led airstrike the previous day. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said it would investigate the claims. Residents of Manogi district on Tuesday said the airstrike killed as many as 10 children as they collected firewood in Nangalam valley.      Full news...

  • March 2, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Armed conflict keeps millions out of school: UNESCO
    AFP: Armed conflict is keeping 28 million children around the world out of schools, where they are often targets of sexual abuse and violence, according to a report released Tuesday by UNESCO. The report titled “The Hidden Crisis: Armed Conflict and Education” said that 42 percent of children not enrolled in schools around the world live in poor countries wracked by conflict.      Full news...

  • March 2, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Nine Boys and a War:‌“The head of a child was missing”
    The New Yorker: Ten boys went out to gather firewood in a valley in Afghanistan on Tuesday. Only one came home; his name is Hemad, and this is what he had to say, as quoted in the Times: ...he helicopters hovered over us, scanned us and we saw a green flash from the helicopters. Then they flew back high up, and in a second round they hovered over us and started shooting. They fired a rocket which landed on a tree.      Full news...

  • March 1, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Taliban shoot 4 for spying in North Waziristan
    PAN: Taliban insurgents killed four people for allegedly spying on behalf of the US in North Waziristan, a tribal region of Pakistan close to the Afghan border, an official said on Tuesday. The dead bodies were found on a roadside on Tuesday morning in Datakhel area on the outskirts of Miranshah town, an official in the town, Mohammad Imran, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...

  • February 26, 2011 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan civilian casualties spike; officials say 200 killed in 2-week period
    The Washington Post: More than 200 Afghans were killed in attacks and military operations during the past two weeks, Afghan officials said Saturday, calling it the deadliest period for civilians since the war began. Two attacks on Saturday added to that toll and fueled fears that violence will climb as winter, typically a slow fighting season in Afghanistan, gives way to spring.      Full news...



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