The most popular Taliban official said that all Afghans who fled the country after the former government of Westerns can be returned home, promising that it would not be harmed if they return.
Taliban Prime Minister Mohammad Hassan Akhund has made an offer of amnesty in his message for the Islamic holiday Eid al-Adhe, also known as “Feast Victims”.
The offer comes in the days after the US President Donald Trump, he announced a deletion of travel ban in 12 countries, including Afghanistan. The measure is largely the bars of Afghanistanians, hoping to move in the United States permanently as those hoping to go to the United States temporarily, such as university studies.
Trump also suspended a program for refugee refugees in January, and everyone ending with the support of Afghanists who are Savers with the United States and left tens of thousands of them.
Afghans in the neighboring Pakistan waiting for the relocation also deal with the rage of deportation by the Islamabadic government to draw them out of the country. Almost a million left Pakistan from 20. October to avoid arrest and expulsion.
Akhund’s holiday message was published on the Social Platform X.
“Afghas people who left the country should return to their homeland,” he said. “No one will hurt them.”
“Return to your prenceral land and live in the atmosphere of peace,” he added officers to properly manage the refugee return services and to ensure that the shelter and support are given.
It is also affectionate to criticize the media for drafting what he said they were “false judgments” about Afghan Taliban rulers and their policies.
“We must not allow the torch of the Islamic system to turn off,” he said. “The media should avoid false judgments and should not minimize the achievements of the system. Although there are challenges, we must remain awake.”
Talibana boarded the capital of Kabul and took most of Afghanistan in Blitz in mid-August, because American and NATO forces were in the last weeks from the country’s exit after 20 years of war.
The offensive encouraged a mass exodus, with tens of thousands of Afghans who knock the airport in chaotic scenes, hoping to fly on American military aircraft. People also fled across the border, neighboring Iran and Pakistan.
Among those fleeing from new Taliban rulers, former government officials, journalists, activists, those who helped us in their campaign against Taliban.
2025-06-07 11:46:00