New applications will be accepted from January 10.


Kabul: Afghanistan's Taliban authorities said Saturday they will resume issuing passports in Kabul, giving hope to citizens who feel threatened living under the Islamists rule.
Thousands of Afghans have applied for new travel documents to escape a growing economic as well as a humanitarian crisis described by the United Nations as an "avalanche of hunger".
Authorities will start issuing the documents from Sunday at Kabul's passport office, Alam Gul Haqqani, the head of the passport department in the interior ministry, told reporters.
The Taliban stopped issuing passports shortly after their August 15 return to power, as tens of thousands of people scrambled to Kabul's only airport in a bid to catch any international flight that could evacuate them.
In October, authorities reopened the passport office in Kabul only to suspend work days later as a flood of applications caused the biometric equipment to break down.
"All the technical issues have now been resolved," Haqqani said, adding that initially travel documents will be given to those who had already applied before the office suspended work.
New applications will be accepted from January 10.
Many Afghans who wanted to visit neighboring Pakistan for medical treatment have also been blocked in the absence of valid passports.
"My mother has some health issues and we needed to go to Pakistan a long time ago, but we could not because the passport department was closed," said Jamshid, who like many Afghans goes by only one name.
"We are happy now ... we can get our passports and go to Pakistan," he said as many began gathering outside the passport office after Saturday's announcement.
- Call for refugees to return -
Issuing passports -- and allowing people to leave amid the growing humanitarian crisis -- is seen as a test of the Taliban's commitment to the international community.
The Taliban are pressing donors to restore billions of dollars in aid that was suspended when the previous Western-backed regime imploded in the final stages of a US military withdrawal.
The abrupt withholding of aid has amounted to an "unprecedented" fiscal shock for an economy already battered by drought and decades of war, according to the United Nations Development Programme.
The crisis has forced many to sell household possessions to buy food.
On Saturday, the Taliban government's deputy foreign minister Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai urged aid agencies to apply pressure for the release of nearly $10 billion worth of assets held in the United States.
Stanekzai also urged all Afghan refugees to return now that the war had ended.
"We invite and encourage everyone to return to Afghanistan, even our political opponents," he said at a function held to mark International Migrants Day.
Afghanistan's minister for refugees Khalil Haqqani said that humanitarian organizations must help Afghan refugees return home.
"Afghan refugees living in camps abroad are in a bad situation. They have to return to Afghanistan and work here," said Haqqani.
Over the past four decades, more than six million Afghans have fled the country to escape war and economic crises, most of them living in neighboring Iran and Pakistan.
The international community has so far not recognized the current Taliban government that was formed after the chaotic withdrawal of US-led foreign troops.
International flights, mainly to Dubai and Abu Dhabi, have meanwhile slowly resumed at Kabul airport after the facility was trashed in August when crowds of people scrambled to evacuate.
SOURCE: AFP

Trump warns Israel to be careful, Qatar special ally of US
- 19 minutes ago

Woman charged in deaths of Marquette athletes
- 3 hours ago
Woman burned alive in Rawalpindi domestic dispute
- 13 hours ago

Tributes pour in as boxing icon Ricky Hatton passes away
- 13 hours ago

Our first look at the iPhone 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max
- 4 hours ago
Google announces two new features for Gmail
- 13 hours ago

Crawford a career-high 167.5 lbs for Canelo clash
- 3 hours ago

49ers' QB Purdy a 'long shot' to play in Week 2
- 3 hours ago

Nintendo Switch modder ordered to pay $2 million in piracy lawsuit
- 4 hours ago

Pakistan proposes Arab-Islamic task force to stop Israeli actions
- 6 minutes ago
Motorway M-5 shut down due to rising floodwaters in Multan
- 13 hours ago

NATO states scramble jets after Russian drone violates airspace
- 14 hours ago