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Mullah Shirin, Afghanistan’s new governor for Kandahar

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The Taliban has announced Mullah Shirin Akhund as new governor for Afghanistan’s Kandahar province, and he is one of the closest aides to the Taliban’s supreme leader.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said new governors for Kunar, Jawzjan, Baghlan and Nuristan provinces were also appointed. Mujahid also said that the Taliban leader appointed new commanders for 209 Al-Fath Corps, 207 Al-Farooq Corps and 203 Mansoori Corps.

The new governors are included Qari Mohammad Ayub for Kunar, Bashir Ahmad Haqqani for Nuristan, Gul Haidar Shafiq for Jawzjan and Abdul Rahman Haqqani for Baghlan provinces.

Mujahid said that these appointments were made by Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, the Taliban leader, adding that Ahmad Taha has been appointed as the deputy minister of the Borders and Tribal Affairs and Mohammad Mohsen Hashemi as the Director General of the Supreme Audit Authority.

Before their appointments to the new governor posts, Mullah Shirin had served as deputy minister of defense for Intelligence Affairs, while Qari Mohammad Ayub as commander of the 207 Al-Farooq Corps, Bashir Ahmad Haqqani as deputy governor of the Taliban for Wardak province, Gul Haidar Shafiq as deputy governor of the Taliban for Ghazni, and Abdul Rahman Haqqani as the deputy minister of Borders and Tribal Affairs of the Taliban.

Shirin is close friend to Taliban supreme leader

Mullah Shirin is originally from Zhari district of Kandahar and was a close friend of Mullah Omar, the founder of the Taliban. Shirin, in the past recent years before to regain the power had lived in Qatar and was a member of the negotiating team between the Taliban and the US.

Mullah Shirin is considered as one of top members of the Taliban and had recently visited Qatar as part of delegation accompanying Taliban Defense Minister Mullah Yaqoob.

Mullah Shirin (L) and Taliban Defense Minister Mullah Yaqoob.

The young defense minister is the son of Mullah Omar, the founder of the Taliban to whom Shirin was a good friend. Shirin was also present in every meeting with foreign officials and delegations.

Mullah Shirin has replaced Mullah Muhammad Yusuf, who went to Balkh province after the death of Mullah Mozmal, the former governor. The Taliban supreme leader sent Yusuf in order to restore peace and order and prevent any big attacks on the Taliban officials in Balkh.

The Islamic State (IS) also known as Daesh terrorist group claimed responsibility for the attack and said one its suicide bomber targeted Mozmal inside his office.

The new governor comes when the Taliban had earlier announced that the office of the Taliban spokesperson was transferred from Kabul to Kandahar by direct order of the supreme leader.

It has been also reported that many close friends and high-ranking Taliban officials have been shifted to Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban and a strategic province.

Reshuffle in key posts

The new appointments of high-ranking officials came as part of promises made by the Taliban to improve security situation and take measures to avoid any security incidents during spring time.

Often, Afghanistan has witnessed bloody spring season where clashes were intensified weather it was before the Taliban victory in 2021 or even now when the Daesh appeared as number one enemy of the Taliban government. The civilians were the mainly victims of these attacks and intensive clashes.

The new appointment in these provinces made only for security reason and the Taliban supreme leader expect the new heads to work for peace and economy projects. It has been said that these new governors and other officials will work to maintain security in these provinces as part of the preparation for spring fight against the Daesh as well as other armed groups.

“Taliban are dealing with Daesh as well as with armed forces of the National Resistance Force (NRF),” said Ahmad Jawad, a political pundit.

Speaking to Harici he said that military action against group’s that are unwilling for peace is essential, but at the same time the Taliban leadership should call on them for peace talks. “War unlashes more war – it is not the solution at all. We are in the war for the last nearly three decades, but the more we engage in war the more miseries we get,” Jawad added.

I am not ruling out military conducts, he said, but war and peace talks should go side by side. “The Taliban should give a chance to its opponent to speak and sit in talks with them in order to find a peaceful solution to all differences,” he requested.

Undoubtedly, the appointment of the new posts would defiantly have a significant impact on the live of Afghans, particularly those living in those provinces. “From my understanding, Taliban by appointing new heads want to engage in direct talks with the people in order maintain transparency and build trust among the public,” Jawad said.

He furthered that Taliban needs to get support from the people which is essential for the peace and stability of the Taliban government.

Taliban interior minister supports Kandahar governor

Taliban interior minister Sirajuddin Haqqani urged the officials and called on the people to cooperate with the new governor of Kandahar Mullah Shiriin for peace and stability of the province.

Speaking to the ceremony held to welcome Shirin in governor’s palace in Kandahar city, Haqqani extolled Shirin’s experience and his commitment to serving the people of Kandahar.

“Shirin has served the Taliban in the past several years and I am sure he will make indefatigable efforts to improve the security situation of Kandahar,” Haqqani added.

Shirin assuming key post at a time when there is huge security concern in Kandahar, and his appointment seen as a move to strengthen its hold on the province and address the security challenges the Taliban faces at the moment.

Shirin has pledged to work closely with local officials and tribal leaders to improve security and governance in the province and said to leave no stone unturned to get the people access to education, healthcare and other basic serves.

 

ASIA

Economists cut China growth forecasts to 4.8 per cent

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Chinese economists have cut their forecasts for the country’s gross domestic product in 2024 in the latest quarterly Nikkei and Nikkei Quick News survey, underlining the pressure on authorities struggling to revive growth.

The average forecast of 28 local experts on China’s economy points to annual GDP growth slowing to 4.8 per cent, down from 4.9 per cent in the previous survey in July. Some of the economists submitted or updated their responses after Chinese authorities last week cut interest rates, supported the property market and pumped billions of dollars into the stock market, sending shares soaring. For those who responded before the stimulus began, the Nikkei asked whether they wanted to change their forecasts.

Of the 25 economists who made full-year growth forecasts in the previous quarterly survey, 16 cut their outlooks, while nine held their expectations steady. The overall range of growth forecasts shifted downwards from 4.8 to 5.3 percent to 4.5 to 5.0 percent. The average forecast for the July-September quarter is 4.6 percent, a further deceleration from the 4.7 percent growth recorded in the April-June period and weaker than the 4.9 percent expansion in the third quarter of last year. The quarter-on-quarter growth forecast for the third quarter, which better reflects the momentum of the economy, is 1.1% in seasonally adjusted terms, slightly higher than the 0.7% growth recorded in the second quarter.

Analysts warned of significant headwinds. KGI Asia’s Ken Chen cut his annual growth forecast to 4.9% from 5.3%, taking into account recent weaker-than-expected data ranging from industrial production and investment to retail and property sales. The current economic growth trend is still down, mainly due to the bottoming out of the property cycle and downward pressure from external demand,’ he said, suggesting that stimulus may not be enough to achieve the government’s annual GDP target of ‘around 5%’.

Despite policy efforts to lower mortgage rates and reduce the cost of buying, the housing sector remains a major drag. When economists were asked to pick the top three risks from a list of nine, the “sluggish housing market” topped the list, cited by 17 out of 20. This was followed by ‘weak consumer confidence’ and ‘no or inadequate policy’.

Hui Shan, chief China economist at Goldman Sachs, cut his forecast from 4.9% to 4.7%, saying that previous policy measures to stimulate the property market “may not be as effective”.

Tetsuji Sano, chief Asia economist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management, said: ‘Consumer demand is likely to fall across the board as the population continues to age and the pension system is underdeveloped.

Property accounts for about 70% of Chinese household assets. This means that the fall in house prices has a direct negative wealth effect, reducing consumer confidence and fuelling deflation concerns.

There are clear risks that deflationary pressures could become entrenched,’ said Alex Muscatelli, Chief Economics Officer at Fitch Ratings. He noted that the GDP deflator, which reflects general price changes in the economy, has fallen on an annualised basis for five consecutive quarters, while prices of basic goods and services have remained flat.

China is heavily reliant on manufacturing and exports, especially as it has struggled to improve sentiment since the COVID-19 outbreak, but momentum in this sector is also starting to wane. Industrial production growth slowed to 4.5% y/y in August from 5.1% y/y in July.

This comes at a time of heightened trade protectionism, with the US, the European Union and Canada imposing additional tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles. Similarly, Indonesia has reimposed tariffs on goods such as textile imports, particularly from China, which came into effect in August.

Arjen van Dijkhuizen, senior economist at ABN AMRO Bank, noted that trade divergence has helped mitigate the impact of tariffs to some extent and that exports remain the key driver of China’s growth. ‘However, China’s supply-side strategy is contributing to escalating trade frictions, with the US, EU and others protecting strategic sectors from China’s [oversupply],’ he said.

Ongoing external and internal uncertainties appear to be behind the stimulus measures, which involve numerous central government agencies, including the People’s Bank of China.

It is rare for the PBOC to announce both a [reserve requirement ratio] cut and an interest rate cut at the same time, signalling the urgency policymakers feel to provide support,’ said Jing Liu, chief economist for Greater China at HSBC.

Jian Chang, chief China economist at Barclays, agreed. Recent developments signal that the Chinese leadership is taking a more proactive approach to tackling its most pressing structural problems. However, both bank economists left their annual forecasts unchanged at 4.9 per cent and 4.8 per cent respectively.

Looking beyond this year, the economists expect a gradual slowdown to 4.5 per cent in 2025 and 4.2 per cent in 2026, reflecting a long-term structural slowdown.

“The crisis in the housing sector, the associated loss of housing wealth and the need for households to repair their balance sheets, as well as uncertain income and job prospects in an uncertain economic environment, are hampering domestic consumption,” said Sophie Altermatt, economist at Julius Baer.

Wei Yao, chief Asia and China economist at Societe Generale, said ‘the current state of the economy calls for more radical measures’ and stressed the need for ‘restructuring of real estate and local government debt rather than further interest rate cuts to end the deflationary spiral’.

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Journalists in prison: We were in the same cell with IS members

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Afghan journalists, who had the experience of being imprisoned, say that they were imprisoned in the same cells as Islamic State (IS) also known as Daesh members. A local journalist in the north of the country who was recently arrested and tortured by the Taliban said: “No professional has been humiliated to this extent,” referring to the journalism professionalism.

Afghan journalists have reported hundreds of cases of torture, arbitrary arrests and increased censorship in the past three years.

They say they are often arrested for covering attacks by opposition groups or writing about discrimination against women. Some of them have announced that they were imprisoned in the same cell with members of the Daesh group.

“My colleagues and I no longer want to continue this profession. New restrictions are announced every day. If we cover attacks or issues related to women, we face phone threats, subpoenas or arrests,” a journalist who was recently arrested and beaten told a foreign media.

At the time of Taliban takeover in 2021, Afghanistan had 8,400 media workers, 1,700 of whom were women. But according to media sources, now only 5100 journalists are working, of which 560 are women.

Taliban asks journalists to respect Islamic values, the country’s national interests while reporting.

One of the officials of organizations supporting journalists, who wished to be recognized by his pine name, Samullah, said “since the Taliban returned to power, we have recorded about 450 cases of violations of journalists’ rights, including arrests, threats, physical violence and torture.”

However, Hayatullah Mohajer Farahi, the Deputy Minister of Information and Culture, said that the media is allowed to operate in Afghanistan, but asked that they should respect “Islamic values, the country’s national interests, and its culture and traditions.”

Last month, new rules were applied to the media’s political talk shows. According to the editor-in-chief of media outlets, based on the new decision of the Taliban, the guests must be selected from the approved list of this group, the topics must be approved in close coordination, and criticism of the regime is prohibited. These programs should not be played live until the recordings are checked and “weaknesses” are removed. An employee of Afghanistan’s state radio and television said that women are no longer allowed to work as reporters.

In Helmand province, it is forbidden to broadcast women’s voices on TV and radio. Also, monitoring of journalists in social networks continues and media continue to operate through self-censorship.

The implementation of new law introduced by the Taliban ministry for the propagation of virtue and the prevention of vice, has also added to the worries of journalists. This law prohibits taking pictures of living creatures and also prohibits women from speaking in public.

Taliban arrests key Daesh members responsible for recent attack that kills many

Taliban said that they have captured key members of the Daesh terrorist group, including a citizen from Tajikistan — they were responsible for recent deadly attacks across Afghanistan.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said that the Taliban’s special forces arrested key members of Daesh claimed that a Kabul suicide bombing that left six people dead last month.

Though, he didn’t specify the arrested number of Daesh members, but said that the Daesh suicide bomber “infiltrated Afghanistan from a training camp in Pakistan.” He also claimed that other members of Daesh were arrested in a series of raids but said all of them recently returned from there (camp in Pakistan.)

Mujahid said that the Daesh group “have established new operational bases and training camps” in Pakistan, saying “from these new bases, they continue to orchestrate attacks, both within Afghanistan and in other countries.”

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China breaks record in corruption crackdown on top cadres

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China’s high-level anti-corruption drive continues.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), China’s top political discipline and anti-corruption body, has reportedly placed a senior inspector under investigation.

According to the South China Morning Post, discipline chief Li Gang is under surveillance as part of the investigation. Li was appointed by the CCDI to the Central Organisation Department, the Communist Party’s top human resources office.

The CCDI announced on Monday that Li was under ‘disciplinary review and surveillance investigation’ for ‘suspected serious violations of discipline and law’.

In the past two weeks, three other senior officials have been placed under investigation on similar charges.

They are Cao Xingxin, deputy general manager of state-owned telecoms giant China Unicom, Sun Yuning, deputy director of the General Administration of Customs, and Du Yubo, former vice-minister of education.

According to a count by the South China Morning Post, 44 senior cadres were placed under investigation in the first nine months of this year, up from 34 in the same period last year.

The CCDI said 45 senior officials were investigated last year. This is the highest number since Xi launched his sweeping anti-corruption campaign in 2013, in which he vowed to go after both ‘tigers’ and ‘flies’ – powerful leaders and lower-level bureaucrats.

Two more were added to the 2023 total in June, when the Politburo announced that former defence ministers Li Shangfu and Wei Fenghe had also been placed under investigation last year.

All the detained Tigers belonged to a pool of what the CCDI calls ‘centrally directed cadres’, officials with the rank of vice-minister or above.

A smaller number held slightly lower ranks but occupied key positions in critical sectors.

Li, 59, a vice-minister, is the highest-ranking disciplinary chief to be dismissed this year after Long Fei, the disciplinary chief of the state-owned China Southern Power Grid.

Long was placed under investigation in February and expelled from the Party in August for serious violations of Party discipline and laws.

Addressing the CCDI’s general assembly in January, Xi urged the top discipline watchdog to ‘regularly weed out rotten apples’ as the fight against corruption remained ‘serious and complex’ after more than a decade.

Xi said the CCDI should ‘resolutely prevent and crack down on wrongdoing’ to strengthen the building of its discipline inspection and supervision team and become a ‘model of self-reform’.

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