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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  • April 11, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    2 children die as rocket hits home in Paktika
    PAN: Two children were killed and as many sustained injuries when a Taliban-fired rocket hit their home in southeastern Paktika province, an official said on Thursday. Elsewhere, a tribal elder was gunned down in northern Takhar province. A stray rocket hit a civilian house in Walus area of Gyani district, killing two children and injuring as many, all from the same family, said Mukhlis Afghan, the governor’s spokesman.      Full news...

  • April 9, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Most Women at Kabul Prison Accused of Moral Crimes
    The Associated Press: The 21-year-old Afghan woman said she fled her abusive husband only to be raped at gunpoint by a stranger who was supposed to help her. The man then settled in front of a TV set, putting the gun on a table by his side. Choosing her moment, Mariam grabbed it and shot her assailant in the head, then turned the gun on herself.      Full news...

  • April 8, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    A testimony: “My wife has never been the same since our sons died”
    The Killid Group: Kabul’s seventh district is also called Sarzamine Sokhta in Dari (Burned Land). Nearly everyone here has lost a family member in the successive rounds of blood-letting witnessed by the city. It was 1999. The sun had just gone down in the western sky recalls Mir Abdul Wadood, now a teacher in a school in neighbouring Parwan, when Taleban dragged away and shot 10 family members.      Full news...

  • April 7, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    NATO airstrike kills 18, including 10 children in Afghanistan
    Al Jazeera: At least 18 people, including as many as 10 children, have been killed in an air strike in eastern Afghanistan. Afghan officials said strikes happened overnight in Kunar province, during a joint operation between Afghan and NATO troops against Taliban fighters. There were conflicting figures of the death toll with other news agencies.      Full news...

  • April 5, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Security and aid work in militia-controlled Afghanistan
    IRIN: Hamidullah, the headmaster of Haji Mir Alam girls’ school in Afghanistan’s northern Kunduz Province, was sitting at his desk in the summer of 2011 when members of a local militia entered the school. The armed men escorted Hamidullah outside the school gate where their commander, Qadirak, was waiting. Then they beat him unconscious with their rifles.      Full news...

  • April 5, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Schoolchildren dead in Parwan clash
    PAN: Two schoolchildren were killed during a clash between security forces and Taliban in the Shinwari district of central Parwan province on Friday, an official said. Hussain Shah Maqsudi, the district police chief, said the children, aged 8 and 10, were killed when the militants ambushed police in the Khinjak area of Kifshan valley.      Full news...

  • April 4, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    NATO strike kills civilians in Afghanistan
    Al Jazeera: A NATO air strike has killed four Afghan police and two civilians in the central-east Ghazni province, Afghan officials have said. A spokesman for the US-led NATO force in Kabul told the AFP news agency on Thursday that the military was checking the information. The attack happened after Taliban insurgents attacked a local police post in eastern Ghazni province before dawn and NATO planes were called in to support the officers under attack.      Full news...

  • April 4, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    3 students dead in bombing
    PAN: Three schoolchildren were killed in a roadside bombing in eastern Nangarhar province on Thursday, officials said. The explosion took place in Batikot district at 12 noon when the students were on their way to home, the provincial deputy police chief said.      Full news...

  • April 3, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan courthouse attack kills more than 50, injures more than 90
    BBC News: A suicide bomb and gun attack on a courthouse in western Afghanistan has left more than 50 people dead and 90 injured, most of them civilians. Militants disguised as soldiers tried unsuccessfully to free suspected Taliban members in capital of the Farah province, Afghan officials said. After a fierce initial gun battle, shooting continued as militants took cover in nearby buildings.      Full news...

  • April 2, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Long shadow of violence on women
    The Killid Group: An alarming 40,000 case of violence against women has been recorded by the AIHRC (Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission) since it was established in 2002. The attackers in a majority of cases are the men in their families. The AIHRC is conducting a national inquiry into violence against women, the results of which will be published this year.      Full news...


  • April 1, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Violence up against Daikundi province women
    PAN: The Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) on Monday raised concerns at growing violence against women by irresponsible armed groups in central Daikundi province. Mohammad Jawad Dadgar, AIHRC provincial head, said his office had recorded 126 cases of violence against women last year, compared with 60 in 2011. The cases include suicide, murder, divorce and beatings.      Full news...

  • April 1, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Disabled protest in front of Karzai office
    PAN: The special People on Monday staged a protest in front of the Presidential Palace in Kabul, seeking their rights land plots. More than 200 physicall challenged individuals marched from Deh Afghanan area and gathered near the Zambaq Square in front of President Hamid Karzai’s office.      Full news...

  • March 31, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Trading of Women Rife in East Afghanistan, Report Claims
    TOLOnews.com: The sale and exchange of women as goods is rampant in Afghanistan’s eastern Nangarhar province with as many as two women traded per day, according to the findings of a sociology researcher. In a report obtained by TOLOnews, researcher Assadullah Ahmadi stated that he found some women had been traded up to five times in three Nangarhar districts...      Full news...

  • March 30, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Civilians killed and injured in Ghazni NATO airstrike
    PAN: Two civilians and 14 insurgents, including three Taliban commanders, were killed as NATO-led troops “mistakenly” hit a car in southern Ghazni province on Saturday, an official claimed. The airstrike took place in the Asfandi village on the outskirts of Ghazni City, the provincial capital, said the governor’s spokesman, Fazl Sabawoon. Seven of the civilians injured included two women and a child.      Full news...

  • March 28, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghan villagers flee homes, blame U.S. drones
    The Associated Press: Barely able to walk even with a cane, Ghulam Rasool says he padlocked his front door, handed over the keys and his three cows to a neighbor and fled his mountain home in the middle of the night to escape relentless airstrikes from U.S. drones targeting militants in this remote corner of Afghanistan.      Full news...

  • March 27, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Ghazni Concert Cancelled as “Haram”
    TOLOnews.com: Religious and government leaders in eastern Ghazni province cancelled a music concert yesterday saying it was “haram” under Islam, a sign of the growing influence of Taliban extremists, Ghazni lawmakers said Wednesday. Two Afghan singers, Mohammad Anwar Azad and Abass Neshat, were to perform at the concert in Ghazni’s Jaghori district to celebrate the Persian new year...      Full news...

  • March 26, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    In Afghan Child Abuse Cases, Victims Go to Jail
    IWPR: The 15-year-old refused to give his name, his eyes cast down as he sat in an empty room in the children’s correction centre in Kabul. Slowly, he began to open up and tell his story. An orphan, he left his home province of Sar-e Pol a year ago and came to the Afghan city to study at an Islamic school. One day while out in the city, he saw a man struggling to carry two bags of groceries.      Full news...

  • March 25, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    The untouchable: a new breed of warlord
    Sydney Morning Herald: In the twilight that passes for reality in Afghanistan, the story of Hakim Shujoyi does not add up neatly – but there’s enough in its different parts to suggest that a monster is stalking the eastern flank of Oruzgan province. Personal detail is opaque, but not the contradictions from which Shujoyi draws inordinate power in Khas Oruzgan, a wild and mountainous swath of the province...      Full news...

  • March 25, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Terrible child abuse
    The Killid Group: Despite national and international efforts to rein in child abuse, the violence has only increased, says new research. The AIHRC (Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission) says out of 140 cases of sexual attacks registered over the last two years, 80 were cases of abuse of children. They can be seen begging on street corners, or at work from morning to night.      Full news...

  • March 24, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Wars In Iraq, Afghanistan Have Created Disasters
    The Post-Journal: Americans have forgotten about the Iraq war, which began 10 years ago this week, and the Afghan war, the longest in American history, but the U.S. government is still throwing its weight around in both countries. The Iraq war, the pretext for which was nonexistent weapons of mass destruction, officially ended in 2011 with the withdrawal of virtually all of America’s combat troops.      Full news...

  • March 23, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    4 children perish in Kandahar blast
    PAN: Four children were killed and two others wounded by a bomb they were playing with in the Mianishin district of southern Kandahar province on Saturday, officials said. The roadside bomb exploded in the Zunto area, where the children found it, the governor’s spokesman, Ahmad Javed Faisal, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...

  • March 20, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Afghanistan’s Nuristan province “at mercy of the Taliban”
    BBC News: Mountainous Nuristan is one of the most volatile and inaccessible provinces in Afghanistan, writes the BBC’s Bilal Sarwary. It is also one of its most insecure - could other parts of the country go the same way? Nuristan is geographically cut off from the rest of Afghanistan and has next to no infrastructure, few medical facilities and endemic corruption.      Full news...

  • March 18, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Media under fire
    The Killid Group: The year has started badly for press freedom. The independent media watchdog, NAI, has warned attacks on journalists have risen in 2013. As many as 31 cases were reported since the beginning of the year compared to only 12 cases in all of 2012. The attackers in the majority of cases were “governmental authorities”, Abdul Mujib Khelwatgar, the executive director of NAI, told the press in Herat.      Full news...

  • March 17, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    23 Farah women lose lives to domestic violence
    PAN: Twenty-three women and five men have lost their lives to domestic violence in western Farah province over the past year, an official said on Sunday. Included in the 154 cases of violence are the killings of 23 women, 64 divorce incidents and three instances of self-immolation, the women’s affairs director said.      Full news...

  • March 15, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Ravages Of War: Afghanistan’s Paghman Gardens Before And After
    RFE/RL: In early February, “Picture This” ran a photo gallery titled “Afghanistan As It Once Was.” The photographs were taken in Kabul in the late 1960s by William Podlich, a professor at Arizona State University. Podlich, a camera buff, spent two years in Afghanistan -- teaching and taking pictures. His daughter, Peg Podlich, was kind enough to share some of her father’s photos with RFE/RL.      Full news...

  • March 13, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    There was no peace for civilians
    The Killid Group: Nahoor in Ghazni province is picture postcard pretty. With plentiful water from streams and rain, it is green. There are orchards of apricots, plums, prunes and other fruit. Three decades ago it was the site of a bloodbath. Seventy-year-old Abdul Husain is a witness. From Deh Afghan, a village in Nahoor district, he says the scars left by war have not healed.      Full news...

  • March 12, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    Analysis: Afghan women navigate a challenging judicial landscape
    IRIN: Sadaf Ahmadi*, 18, from the northern Afghan province of Badakshan, has arrived battered and bruised at a women’s refuge centre in Faizabad. It is her fifth such visit. Every time it is the same. Staff at the centre, run by Women for Women, an Afghan NGO, try to offer support, but every previous time local community leaders or the government courts send her back to her husband and the beatings continue.      Full news...

  • March 11, 2013 :: RSS :: Print :: Email
    2 civilians dead in ISAF firing in Kabul
    PAN: Foreign troops opened fire at a private truck, killing its two occupants in the Deh Sabz district of central Kabul province, an official said on Monday. The incident occurred at 10:30am when the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) personnel fired shots at the vehicle of a private firm responsible for providing maintenance support to police, the Ministry of Interior spokesman, Gulam Siaddique Siddiqui, told Pajhwok Afghan News.      Full news...




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