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Taliban say efforts to release a British couple from Afghan prison not yet complete

Taliban say efforts to release a British couple from Afghan prison not yet complete

Independent2 days ago
The Taliban said Wednesday that efforts to free a British couple from an Afghan prison are not yet complete and denied that their rights were being violated despite concerns from their families and U.N. officials.
Peter and Barbie Reynolds, who are in their 70s, were arrested in early February after being taken from their home in central Bamiyan province to the capital, Kabul.
The husband and wife run an organization that provides education and training programs. Family members in the U.K. have said they are being mistreated and held on undisclosed charges.
U.N. human rights experts on Monday called for the couple's release, warning their physical and mental health was deteriorating rapidly and that they were at risk of irreparable harm or even death.
The Taliban's Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi rejected concerns about rights violations.
'They are in constant contact with their families,' Muttaqi told reporters at a media briefing in Kabul. 'Consular services are available. Efforts are underway to secure their release. These steps have not yet been completed. Their human rights are being respected. They are being given full access to treatment, contact and accommodation.'
He did not say what steps were being taken to secure their release.
According to the U.N. experts, the couple's spell in detention included time in a maximum-security facility and later in underground cells, without sunlight, before being moved to above-ground cells at the General Directorate of Intelligence in Kabul.
Peter needs heart medication and, during his detention, has had two eye infections and intermittent tremors in his head and down his left arm. He recently collapsed, the experts added, while Barbie suffers from anaemia and remains weak.
Officials from the U.K. Foreign Ministry visited the couple on July 17, family members said.
Peter and Barbie have no bed or furniture and sleep on a mattress on the floor, the family said in a statement Sunday.
Peter's face is red, peeling and bleeding, likely due to the return of skin cancer that urgently needs removing. 'We, their four adult children, have written privately to the Taliban leadership twice, pleading for them to uphold their beliefs of compassion, mercy, fairness, and human dignity," the children added.
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Inside BBC Verify - Satellite view of Cyprus fires and analysing doctors' pay row
Inside BBC Verify - Satellite view of Cyprus fires and analysing doctors' pay row

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Inside BBC Verify - Satellite view of Cyprus fires and analysing doctors' pay row

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At least 28 adults and 20 children starve to death in July as Gaza hunger crisis deepens
At least 28 adults and 20 children starve to death in July as Gaza hunger crisis deepens

The Independent

time9 hours ago

  • The Independent

At least 28 adults and 20 children starve to death in July as Gaza hunger crisis deepens

Five starving children at a Gaza City hospital were wasting away, and nothing the doctors tried was working. The basic treatments for malnourishment that could save them had run out under Israel's blockade. The alternatives were ineffective. One after another, the babies and toddlers died over four days. In greater numbers than ever, children hollowed up by hunger are overwhelming the Patient's Friends Hospital, the main emergency center for malnourished kids in northern Gaza. The deaths last weekend also marked a change: the first seen by the center in children who had no preexisting conditions. Symptoms were getting worse, with children too weak to cry or move, said Dr Rana Soboh, a nutritionist. In past months, most improved, despite supply shortages, but now patients stayed longer and didn't get better, she said. 'There are no words in the face of the disaster we are in. 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Since then, it has allowed in around 4,500 trucks for the UN and other aid groups to distribute, including 2,500 tonnes of baby food and high-calorie special food for children, the Israeli foreign ministry claimed on Wednesday. That is an average of 69 trucks a day, far below the 500-600 trucks a day the UN says are needed. The UN has been unable to distribute much of the aid because hungry crowds and gangs take most of it from its trucks. Separately, Israel has also backed the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which opened four centers distributing boxes of food supplies. Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed trying to reach the sites. On Tuesday, David Mencer, spokesman for the Israeli prime minister's office, denied there was a 'famine created by Israel' in Gaza and blamed Hamas for creating 'man-made shortages' by looting aid trucks. The UN denies Hamas siphons off significant quantities of aid. Humanitarian workers say Israel just needs to allow aid to flow in freely, saying looting stops whenever aid enters in large quantities.

‘Hungry aid staff fainting' as starvation spreads in Gaza and truce hopes fade
‘Hungry aid staff fainting' as starvation spreads in Gaza and truce hopes fade

The Guardian

time9 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘Hungry aid staff fainting' as starvation spreads in Gaza and truce hopes fade

The head of the main UN agency serving Palestinians has said his frontline staff are fainting from hunger, as the number of people dying of starvation in Gaza continued to rise and hopes for a ceasefire faded as negotiations collapsed. 'This deepening crisis is affecting everyone, including those trying to save lives in the war-torn enclave … when caretakers cannot find enough to eat, the entire humanitarian system is collapsing,' Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (Unrwa), said on Thursday. At least 45 people have died of hunger in the last four days. The UN and aid groups blame Israel's blockade of almost all aid into the territory for the lack of food. Lazzarini said in a statement that a colleague in the territory had told him: 'People in Gaza are neither dead nor alive, they are walking corpses.' 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I will make a formal announcement at the United Nations General Assembly in September,' the French president wrote on X and Instagram. Earlier, Israel and the US announced they were recalling their negotiators from Doha, where peace talks were being held. The US envoy, Steve Witkoff, accused Hamas of not acting in good faith. 'We have decided to bring our team home from Doha for consultations after the latest response from Hamas, which clearly shows a lack of desire to reach a ceasefire in Gaza,' he wrote on X. He said the US would consider 'alternative options' to recover the hostages and 'create a more stable environment for the people of Gaza' without elaborating on what those alternatives might be. Witkoff's announcement came after Hamas sent its response on the latest ceasefire proposal to mediators. It was an abrupt about-face to the optimism earlier in the day, when the Associated Press reported an Israeli official saying the Hamas proposal was workable. Witkoff had also been scheduled to meet the top Israeli adviser, Ron Dermer, and the Qatari prime minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani in Sardinia, which was regarded as a positive sign for the ceasefire talks. It was unclear if or when those meetings would still happen. Hamas's proposal included requests on the number of prisoners exchanged, the agencies to be allowed to distribute aid in Gaza and a permanent end to the war rather than a ceasefire, Israeli media reported. The group's demands came as global pressure mounted on Israel to stop fighting and a growing number of countries expressed horror at the scenes of starvation in the territory. A Palestinian official close to the talks told Reuters the Hamas response was 'flexible, positive and took into consideration the growing suffering in Gaza and the need to stop the starvation'. A Hamas source said the proposal included a fresh roadmap for a prisoner exchange, which it told Reuters was a top priority for the group. The Israeli Hostage Families Forum, representing the families of those held in Gaza, issued a statement of concern at the news that negotiators had been recalled and urged a ceasefire to be reached quickly. 'Each day that passes endangers the hostages' chances of recovery and risks losing the ability to locate the fallen or gain vital intelligence about them,' it said. The deal that was under consideration is expected to involve a 60-day ceasefire during which Hamas would release 10 living hostages and the bodies of 18 others in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. Talks would be held during the ceasefire period to reach a lasting truce and aid supplies to the besieged strip would be increased. It has only been since the end of the war between Iran and Israel last month that the serious prospect of a ceasefire in Gaza has emerged. As negotiations continued, Israeli attacks increased. At least 89 people were killed in the last 24 hours as Israeli airstrikes pounded central Gaza, health authorities said. Israel says the global media is exaggerating the scale of the hunger crisis, even though aid groups and pictures coming from Gaza show clear evidence of starvation and doctors who treat malnourished children say they are unable to get enough to eat themselves. Israel only lets a trickle of aid into Gaza, the vast majority of which is distributed by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a private US firm. GHF operates four food distribution points staffed by US mercenaries, a system which has been described as a death trap. More than 1,000 people seeking aid have been killed trying to access supplies in the nearly two months since GHF began operating in Gaza. Aid was formerly distributed through more than 400 distribution points under a UN-led system, but Israel has all but stopped UN aid into the territory since March. Israel accuses Hamas of stealing UN aid, a claim for which humanitarians say there is little evidence. Aid groups say GHF, which was meant to replace the UN, lacks the capacity to do so and that its militarised model violates key humanitarian principles. Restoring the UN aid system as a part of a ceasefire deal is a key Hamas demand. Israeli negotiators have softened their stance on the issue as pressure grows even within Israel to stop the starvation crisis, which the World Health Organization director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, described on Wednesday as man-made. Thousands of Israeli demonstrators carrying bags of flour and pictures of Palestinian children who died of starvation protested in Tel Aviv on Wednesday, calling for an end to the Gaza blockade. Hamas is also calling for a ceasefire deal to include a permanent end to the Gaza war, something that Israel has refused. A ceasefire deal is unpopular among the more extreme members of Benjamin Netanyahu's cabinet and Israel has sought to keep open the possibility of restarting the war after the ceasefire period.

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