After the Taliban took control of Afghanistan with a dramatic fall from the Ashraf Ghani government supported by the US, the country faced the worst humanitarian and economic crisis in the world without a place for human rights and sustainable cruelty in women and girls.
Given the same Afghan activists in the United States, including women’s rights activists and several supporters of the Front Resistance National (NRF), held protests in Washington, DC, in front of the White House on Sunday.
The protest meeting was handled by NRF activists, Javid Pymanee, a journalist and political analyst, Khalida Nawabi from the free Afghanistan movement, and Marina Omari, an Afghan women activist.
All speakers talk about the ongoing crisis in Afghanistan and highlight the condition of women, girls and children who are sad in Afghanistan under the Taliban rule and continuous gross human violations committed by the powerful Islamic group in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan activists condemned human rights violations, including arbitrary arrests, executions, and abduction of innocent Afghans by Taliban militants. NRF members also stated that the Taliban government in Afghanistan has not been received by many countries and emphasizes the importance of the global community to stand with NRF in this crucial situation.
Nawabi said that Afghan activists strongly supported the resolution of US 6993, which tried to declare Pakistan as a sponsor of terrorism.
As many as 50 Afghan activists participated in the protest rally, and they also promised to continue their efforts to free Afghanistan from the Taliban. Protesters also raised slogans against the Taliban and demanded direct release of women protesters held by the Taliban. Als demonstrators.
Since the Taliban controlled Afghanistan, the situation in the country continued to remain very uncertain and change quickly. The Afghan economy has fainted, and the country is now in the grip of the large crisis caused by unemployment, the lack of governance, and a billion-dollar convenience of assets held abroad.
Some countries, including Islamic countries, the United States and India, have sent humanitarian and monetary assistance to Kabul, but this has not alleviated the ongoing crisis in Afghanistan which torn war. Nearly 23 million Afghans face extreme level hunger, with the spread of rapid disease and no proper health care system.a