Indian authorities did not allow a female Muslim photojournalist to travel to New York for her award ceremony
US officials now say Ukraine did not donate the wheat, contradicting an official tweet that posted last month
As Afghan media crumbles, Taliban go after foreign journalists who they accuse of spreading lies
How much the country owes and who should pay it off remain unclear
Tens of civilian Afghans have been in killed in Islamic State attacks as the Taliban claim capturing the group’s Europe handler
As journalists face censorship and quit, some Afghans turn to social platforms for news
Diplomats warn that Taliban are pushing the country to more isolation, poverty and internal strife
Sanctions are expected to change behavior, not punish, US Treasury says
Taliban leader appoints new education minister but keeps girls’ secondary schools shut
Tens of thousands of teachers need salary support to keep public schools open
Experts doubt the US plan will revive Afghan economy and avert humanitarian crisis
Representatives from many countries condemn Taliban’s policies toward Afghan women — except Russia and China
Despite a decree from their top leader banning drugs, the Taliban present an unimpressive scorecard of achievements
Taliban leaders are touting success of what they media reforms which bar programming in Afghanistan considered indecent or any content critical of Islam or the Taliban themselves
Muslim scholars issue thousands of fatwas, but some carry more serious consequences than others
World powers agree to engage Taliban officials but disagree on how, where to meet them
Taliban have also collected more than $1M in visa fees from foreign nationals visiting Afghanistan
Despite sanctions, sending money to Afghanistan is possible but those receiving it face many obstacles
Since Taliban took over, Afghan media have suffered catastrophic setbacks while journalists are still trying to leave the country
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