Long awaited pension payments relief for Afghan retirees
Long awaited pension payments relief for Afghan retirees/node/2613260/middle-east
Long awaited pension payments relief for Afghan retirees
Afghan retiree, Shah Rasool Omari, looks on during an interview with AFP at his house in Kabul. (AFP)
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Updated 14 min 13 sec ago
AFP
Long awaited pension payments relief for Afghan retirees
Retired public sector employees have for the past few years increasingly demonstrated outside government buildings, demanding payments that ended after the return of Taliban authorities in 2021
Government spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat told local media eventually the years of unpaid pensions would be disbursed
Updated 14 min 13 sec ago
AFP
KABUL: After a four-year suspension, the Taliban government has announced it would resume pension payments for Afghanistan’s nearly 150,000 retired military and civil servants.
They will be the last public sector workers to receive any payments, after the cash-strapped authorities announced an end to the public pension scheme last year.
“When you’re jobless sitting at home and have nothing, you’re worried about food,” said 71-year-old Abdul Sabir outside the pension department in the capital Kabul.
He was among those scheduled to receive his pension again in a gradual rollout across government institutions.
Retired public sector employees have for the past few years increasingly demonstrated outside government buildings, demanding payments that ended after the return of Taliban authorities in 2021.
“All the pending amounts will be distributed to the retirees,” pension fund director Mohammad Rahmani told AFP this week.
Government spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat told local media eventually the years of unpaid pensions would be disbursed.
The Taliban authorities have slashed salaries, which are paid erratically, while replacing many civil servants with loyalists.
They do not publish budgets and their revenue streams are opaque.
Observers say security spending has consumed much of the budget at other ministries’ expense, while slashed foreign aid that previously bolstered the public sector has made pension payments unsustainable.
Most people AFP spoke to expected to receive 40,000-50,000 Afghanis ($580-720) a year from their pension, a relatively small sum that entire families nonetheless will rely on for survival.
Abdul Wasse Kargar said he was currently owed 31,000 Afghanis in debt to friends and shopkeepers, after a 45-year career at the education ministry.
“If they give us our pension, it will solve 50 percent of our problems. We can make ends meet with that and we will be free of some of this poverty and helplessness,” said the 74-year-old, tired of going door-to-door begging for loans.
Nearly half of the Afghan population lives in poverty and the unemployment rate is more than 13 percent, according to the World Bank.
Shah Rasool Omari had tried to get a job during the four years waiting for his pension but said his age dogged his chances.
Potential employers told him that they “want a young boy who can work and who we can order around.”
“I have six sons and then their children, all of them need to be supported from my pension payment,” said Rasool, who worked in the Air Force for 30 years.
Public sector pensions support around 150,000 families, or almost a million people, the Afghanistan Analysts Network (AAN) said in a 2024 report.
The system had been in crisis long before the Taliban takeover, and the economic crunch that followed the disappearance of foreign aid that funded the pension system sounded the death knell, the AAN report said.
“There was simply not enough domestic revenue coming in for the government to both run the country and meet its obligation to retirees,” it said.
Nabiullah Attai now regrets his career with the police.
“I gave 38 years — the best years of my life — to this country,” he told AFP.
“But today, I have nothing to show for it.”
UN Security Council to decide fate of peacekeeper mandate in Lebanon
Some 10,800 UNIFIL peacekeepers have been acting as a buffer between Israel and Lebanon since 1978
Renewal of their mandate, which expires Sunday, being opposed by US and Israel
French-proposed compromise would keep the UNIFIL in place until the end of 2026
Updated 55 min 19 sec ago
AFP
UNITED NATIONS: The UN Security Council is set to vote Thursday on the future of the blue helmet peacekeeping mission in south Lebanon, which has faced US and Israeli opposition.
Some 10,800 peacekeepers have been acting as a buffer between Israel and Lebanon since 1978. But the usual renewal of their mandate, which expires Sunday, is facing hostility this year from Israel and its American ally, who want them to leave.
The Council is debating a French-drafted compromise that would keep the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) in place until the end of next year while it prepares to withdraw.
France, which oversees the issue at the Security Council and has the support of Beirut, had initially considered a one-year extension and referred simply to an “intention” to work toward a withdrawal of UNIFIL.
But faced with a possible US veto, and following several proposals and a Monday postponement of the vote, the latest draft resolution seen by AFP unequivocally schedules the end of the mission in 16 months.
The Council “decides to extend for a final time the mandate of UNIFIL as set out by resolution 1701 (2006) until 31 December 2026 and to start an orderly and safe drawdown and withdrawal from 31 December 2026 and within one year,” the text says.
A French peacekeeper of the UNIFIL sits atop a stopped armored vehicle during a patrol in the village of Kfar Kila in southern Lebanon near the border with northern Israel on August 27, 2025. (AFP)
At that point the Lebanese army will be solely responsible for ensuring security in the country’s south.
With US envoy Tom Barrack saying Tuesday that Washington would approve a one-year extension, it remained unclear what the US position would be come Thursday.
Under a truce that ended a recent war between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah, Beirut’s army has been deploying in south Lebanon and dismantling the militant group’s infrastructure there.
As part of the ceasefire, and under pressure from Washington, the plan is for Hezbollah’s withdrawal to be complete by the end of the year.
Last week Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called for the UN peacekeepers to remain, arguing that any curtailment of UNIFIL’s mandate “will negatively impact the situation in the south, which still suffers from Israeli occupation.”
The latest draft resolution also “calls on the Government of Israel to withdraw its forces north of the Blue Line” — the UN-established demarcation line between Lebanon and Israel — “including from the five positions held in Lebanese territory.”
Medical data reveals scale of ‘violent trauma’ injuries in Gaza
Outpatient figures for last year from 6 clinics reveal tens of thousands of consultations for wounds caused by Israeli military onslaught
1 in 3 day patients are under age of 15, another third are women, according to report in medical journal The Lancet
Updated 28 August 2025
Arab News
LONDON: Wounds caused by Israeli bombs and bullets accounted for nearly half of the injuries treated at outpatient clinics run by Medecins Sans Frontieres in Gaza last year, according to
Almost a third of day patients treated for such injuries at the charity’s health centers in the territory were children, the figures revealed, further highlighting the devastating human cost to Palestinian civilians of nearly two years of conflict.
The six MSF-supported health centers from which the data was collected were located mostly in central and southern Gaza. More than 200,000 outpatient consultations were conducted at the facilities during 2024. More than 90,000 of them involved wounds, and nearly 40,000 of them were caused by “violent trauma,” primarily the result of bombing, shelling and gunfire.
The data does not include figures for other healthcare services provided by MSF, such as operating theaters and emergency rooms, nor does it take account of people killed at the scene of attacks.
In two of the hospitals, MSF staff found nearly 60 percent of lower-limb wounds were caused by explosive weapons, “often with open injuries to bone, muscle or skin,” according to The Lancet.
“Explosive weapons are designed to be used in open battlefields, but are increasingly being used in urban areas,” the report continued. “The makeshift shelters in which people live following frequent displacement offer almost no protection against explosive weapons, and especially their secondary effects such as blast, shrapnel and incendiary impact.”
The Israeli offensive in Gaza, which has been described as amounting to a genocide by many international organizations and governments, has killed nearly 63,000 Palestinians, about half of them women and children, according to figures from the Palestinian Ministry of Health.
Of all outpatients treated for wounds at the MSF facilities last year, nearly a third were children under the age of 15, and another third were women.
The data was gathered before Israeli authorities imposed a total blockade on Gaza earlier this year, halting supplies of food and medical aid. Even before that development, however, the MSF staff collecting the information about outpatients described a lack of “crucial supplies and equipment necessary to treat these complex wounds.”
Almost a fifth of patients arriving at the health centers for first-time treatment of their injuries had infected wounds, the data revealed.
“In one MSF-supported health facility, wound infections were as high as 28 percent,” the report said.
Gaza’s healthcare system has been decimated by the conflict between Israel and Hamas. Half of the 36 hospitals that were operational before the war have closed, and more than 1,500 Palestinian healthcare workers have been killed.
MSF said the violence unleashed by the Israeli military has caused “physical and mental damage on a scale that would overwhelm even the best-functioning health systems in the world.”
Israel conducts landing on former air defense base in southwest Damascus — sources
Updated 28 August 2025
Reuters
AMMAN: Israel conducted an airborne landing on a former air defense base in the southwest Damascus countryside during a series of strikes on the area, but withdrew after the landing, two Syrian army sources said on Wednesday.
The air defense base had been used by Iran during the rule of ousted Syrian leader Bashar Assad. The targets of the strikes — the Kiswa region and the strategic Jabal Manea hilltop — were also among the most significant military outposts used by pro-Iranian militias during the Assad era.
Asked for comment on the strikes, an Israeli military spokesperson said: “We do not comment on foreign reports.”
Six Syrian soldiers were killed in Israeli drone strikes in the Damascus countryside near the same area 24 hours earlier, according to Syrian state media.
Israel has stepped up incursions into southern Syria and the latest strikes coincided with security talks between Damascus and its long-time adversary aimed at reducing tensions.
Another military source said Syria believes equipment was left behind in the area, perhaps by Iranian-backed militias that were entrenched there. The new Syrian army has since established a token presence there.
The source added there were initial reports of several casualties.
Syrian President Ahmad Al-Sharaa was attending the opening of a business expo nearly 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the targeted area, one of the Syrian sources added.
Iraqi Kurdish PUK security force alleges plot to kill party leader
The escalation has raised concerns among regional officials and analysts that violence could threaten the relative stability long enjoyed by Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region
Updated 28 August 2025
Reuters
BAGHDAD: A security agency controlled by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region said on Wednesday that they had uncovered a plot to assassinate PUK leader Bafel Talabani, sharing a video that purported to show six guards saying they had received an order to kill him.
The video, broadcast by a PUK-affiliated security service in the Kurdistan region, showed the fighters describing plans to rent an apartment in a high-rise building near the PUK leader’s headquarters. Footage included snipers with silencers positioned near a window overlooking the party leader’s office.
The guards in the video say they received their orders from Lahur Talabani, a prominent Kurdish politician who is the cousin of Bafel Talabani and leader of the rival People’s Front party.
Lahur Talabani’s office was not immediately available for comment. A member of the People’s Front accused the PUK of using judicial and security institutions to suppress political rivals.
Lahur Talabani was arrested on Friday by PUK-controlled forces after they raided a hotel in Sulaymaniya late on Thursday and clashed for four hours with fighters loyal to him. Police and hospital sources said three PUK commandos and two of Lahur Talabani’s fighters were killed in the fighting.
Security officials said more than 160 of Lahur Talabani’s loyalists were detained alongside him.
A court in Sulaymaniya had issued an arrest warrant for Lahur Talabani on charges of attempted murder and destabilizing the city’s security, judicial officials said. Sources familiar with the situation said the arrest was part of a broader struggle for control over Sulaymaniya, a key stronghold of the PUK.
Lahur Talabani was previously joint president of the PUK until a power struggle led to his ousting in 2021.
“Deploying tanks and hundreds of armored vehicles to arrest a party leader is absolutely unrelated to legal or democratic methods,” said the People’s Front representative, speaking on condition of anonymity due to fear of arrest.
The confrontation marks the most serious internal armed conflict among Kurdish factions in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.
The escalation has raised concerns among regional officials and analysts that violence could threaten the relative stability long enjoyed by Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region, which has largely remained insulated from the broader unrest affecting other parts of the country.
Why families uprooted by Sudan conflict are weighing safety abroad against perilous returns
Despite ongoing violence, hundreds of thousands are heading back, driven by necessity, family ties, and the dream of rebuilding
Families returning often find ruined homes, shattered infrastructure, and limited aid, yet cling to resilience and hope for renewal
Updated 28 August 2025
KHALED AL-KHAWALDEH
DUBAI: Osama Al-Tayeb had barely left his home country before the war. Born and raised in Sudan, the 29-year-old lived a life rooted in familiarity, unaware that one day he would be forced to flee entirely.
The conflict, which erupted between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in April 2023, has displaced millions, forcing people like Al-Tayeb onto long, uncertain journeys.
After months of instability in Khartoum, Al-Tayeb left the capital, first traveling to Al-Jazira state before undertaking a four-day journey along the Red Sea coast to the north, eventually crossing into Egypt via Aswan and settling in Cairo.
“The situation in Cairo was good, the people there were good, but at the end of the day, it was of course difficult to be away from your home,” Al-Tayeb told Arab News.
A Sudanese man shows his train ticket that reads "We are back, Thanks Egypt", as families displaced by conflict voluntarily return. (Reuters)
Despite Egypt’s relative stability and safety, he felt constrained, unable to move forward with his life. Two years on from his departure, he decided to return — driven by a resolve to rebuild his life and country.
“I had to stop waiting. I had no job, so I felt I had to travel back to Sudan as the situation was getting better there.”
Now living in Port Sudan, Al-Tayeb’s return is emblematic of both opportunity and uncertainty. Though he arrived with tempered expectations, he was surprised by what he found.
“I was expecting the situation in Sudan to be more difficult than it was. However, public services, healthcare, and even electricity — despite some cuts, which were normal even before the war — were there,” he said.
Robaika Peter holds her severely malnourished child at the pediatric ward of the Mother of Mercy Hospital in Gidel, South Kordofan, Sudan, on June 25, 2024. (Reuters)
Observing improvements in government operations and available work, he expressed cautious optimism. He knew of many preparing to return to Khartoum and Al-Jazira, areas far more heavily damaged by the war.
Stories like Al-Tayeb’s are becoming increasingly common, despite the conflict still raging in many parts of the country.
The war has displaced nearly 4 million people across international borders and at least 12 million internally.
owever, the UN Development Programme estimates that roughly 1.5 million refugees have returned to Sudan, with another half a million expected over the next six months.
Their return is not without peril. Luca Renda, the UNDP resident representative in Sudan, told Arab News that while Port Sudan has been relatively stable, the situation remains fragile.
He said recent drone attacks on airport facilities in the city and a surge in cholera cases elsewhere underscored that volatility.
“It’s important to understand that there have been parts of Sudan that have been relatively stable since the beginning of the conflict, and definitely Port Sudan is one of those areas,” Renda said.
Displaced Sudanese queue to receive humanitarian aid upon their arrival in the capital Khartoum on July 28, 2025. (AFP)
For refugees dependent on aid abroad, returning to a place like Port Sudan — a relatively unscathed coastal city and the de facto capital of the SAF-led government — can feel comparatively better.
Yet in other parts of the country, specifically Khartoum and Al-Jazira, where most refugees come from, the damage is extensive if not catastrophic.
“For the great majority of Sudanese, they will find that their home has been occupied or ransacked or looted, but the extent of the damage may differ from simple looting to being completely burned down,” he said.
“In most cases, people will find that all their possessions — whatever they had of any value — have been taken. The level and extent of the repair for many families is enormous.”
Flood water inundates a main street in Sudan's capital Khartoum following heavy rain on August 27, 2025. (AFP)
Thuraya Saleh, a Sudanese writer and editor at Andariya, a magazine focused on East Africa, shared a similar story. Now based in Cairo, she spoke of her aunt, a university professor, who returned to Khartoum this year for work and was confronted with a much harsher reality.
“My aunt is a university professor, and her university demanded she go back because they’re reopening. She was told she either needs to go back or lose her job,” Saleh said.
“However, it’s fair to say that the reality there was shocking to her.”
Located in an area heavily affected by fighting, her aunt’s home had been looted and completely destroyed. Damage to local infrastructure meant basic services like water and electricity were severely limited.
A general view shows smoke rising after what military sources told Reuters is a Rapid Support Forces drone attack in Port Sudan targeting fuel storage facilities in Port Sudan on May 5, 2025. (REUTERS)
“She basically couldn’t live in her home. She had to live with another relative in a safer area that did not witness a lot of fighting,” Saleh said.
Those who returned to Khartoum reported receiving just nine hours of electricity per day, while disease outbreaks were worsened by Sudan’s rainy season. Saleh said cholera cases in her aunt’s area were surging.
For Saleh herself, a return to Sudan is not yet an option.
“For me, my mom is older. She has many chronic diseases. She requires some sort of stability in life, and we need to be able to have a functioning hospital in case she needs urgent care,” she said.
“We keep saying, however, that maybe if things got more stable, then we could consider returning.”
Vendors fill tanks on donkey carts with drinking water for sale during a shortage in Khartoum, Sudan, on Aug. 26, 2025. (AP)
Saleh considers herself fortunate, with the financial means to remain abroad. Many others do not have that option. Pressure to leave Egypt is growing as the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, is forced to reduce financial support following cuts by USAID and other donors.
Financial concerns are not the only motive for returning.
“There are people who are going back for sentimental reasons, just because they want to live in their home,” Saleh said. “A couple of days ago, a friend told me that his aunt, who is very old, just went back because she wanted to die and be buried there.
“For others, it’s simply because they can’t afford living in Cairo any longer.”
Renda of UNDP said refugees in Egypt, the single biggest host of Sudanese refugees, are among the luckier ones, benefiting from better aid and support.
Cholera infected patients receive treatment in the cholera isolation center at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 14, 2025. (AFP)
By contrast, at least a million Sudanese in Chad face far more precarious conditions. He stressed that before any mass return could occur, the country needed to resolve the conflict.
“Sudan needs a comprehensive solution,” he said. “We need to start with a ceasefire, access people in need, and then hopefully initiate some kind of transitional process that can lead to a peaceful conclusion.”
Renda highlighted some progress by authorities, aid agencies, and the UN, such as mine clearance, restoration of health facilities, containment of cholera outbreaks, and infrastructure repairs.
Cholera infected patients receive treatment in the cholera isolation centre at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 14, 2025.
However, he acknowledged that UNDP had received just over $1 billion of its requested $4.2 billion, hampering its humanitarian response. He believes the conflict is still far from resolved.
“We can see maybe some partial recovery while the situation remains catastrophic in some areas,” he said. “In other parts of Sudan, particularly in the east and increasingly around Khartoum, there is gradual, slow recovery.”
Renda warned that Sudan is at risk of becoming an invisible crisis, lacking both the political engagement and financial support necessary to resolve the conflict.
Nevertheless, for young Sudanese like Al-Tayeb, the chance to rebuild his life — and his country — outweighs the uncertainties.
“For Sudanese and non-Sudanese, instead of sitting in suffering, why not come here and work here and rebuild your country?”