RFE/RL's Radio Azadi is one of the most popular and trusted media outlets in Afghanistan. Nearly half of the country's adult audience accesses Azadi's reporting on a weekly basis.
With no say in their fate, no government to represent them, and in the wrong place to exercise their international rights as refugees, thousands of Afghans stranded in Indonesia for up to a decade are making a last-ditch plea on social media to change their situation.
A female Afghan prosecutor overcame a crippling disease and discrimination to pursue an education and get her dream job. But since the Taliban takeover, she has been unemployed as the militants have barred many women from returning to work.
The Taliban's religious police have erected banners in Kabul that order women to wear the Islamic hijab.
The Taliban-led government in Afghanistan says a delegation led by acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi has met with resistance leaders Ahmad Massud and Ismail Khan in Iran.
At least seven people, including six children, have been killed in an explosion in eastern Afghanistan near the border with Pakistan, local officials said.
The Taliban have detained a prominent university professor after he publicly criticized the Taliban-led government in a live television debate, prompting a torrent of domestic and international criticism and worries about his safety.
The Taliban's feared Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice has issued a spate of draconian decrees in recent weeks. Afghans say the directives, including ordering men to grow beards and women to travel with a male chaperone, infringe on basic human rights and freedoms.
Dozens of people said to abuse drugs are being held at one of Afghanistan's biggest prisons together with convicted criminals. Taliban officials claim Kandahar Central Prison serves as an educational and rehab center for those with drug addictions.
Turkmen border guards have skirmished with Taliban fighters along the Afghan border, according to local media reports.
Footage taken by protesters on December 28 in Kabul and shared with RFE/RL showed the women chanting slogans and their march being stopped by the Taliban. Several protesters sustained injuries in a stampede after Taliban militants shot in the air to disperse the rally.
The Taliban has released the head of a prominent Afghan television station two days after he was detained.
A number of Afghan women have been injured in a stampede caused by Taliban guards firing in the air during a protest in Kabul against discriminatory measures including new travel restrictions on women.
Aref Nouri, the head of Afghanistan's private Nourin television network, has been arrested by the Taliban authorities for unspecified reasons.
In a further move restricting women’s freedoms in Afghanistan, the Taliban says that women seeking to travel more than 72 kilometers should not be offered transport unless they are accompanied by a close male relative.
A young Afghan woman is running a secret school for girls inside her home in Kabul. The woman, a university graduate, told RFE/RL's Radio Azadi that she is teaching around 50 girls at her own expense.
Hundreds of Afghans have marched in Kabul demanding the release of billions of dollars of assets held in the United States in a protest sanctioned by the ruling Taliban as the country grapples with a growing economic crisis that threatens to turn into a humanitarian disaster.
The Taliban authorities in Afghanistan have announced that they will resume issuing passports, providing a window of hope for those who have applied for travel documents in an effort to leave the country.
The unrecognized Taliban government in Afghanistan has again called on the United Nations to recognize its nominee to head the country's representation at the international body.
With most high schools and jobs closed to girls and women under Taliban rule, some are trying to learn one of the few professions still open to them. A sewing studio in Farah Province is offering job training, but equipment is in short supply and students struggle to afford the materials they need.
Nine Afghan boxers who traveled to Serbia to compete in an international tournament last month are refusing to return to their homeland, fearing they will be targeted by the Taliban regime.
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