Category: Security

  • B-1 bomber crashes at U.S. Air Force base

    A United States B-1 Lancer bomber crashed Thursday afternoon during a training mission; however, all of the crew members “ejected safely.” The B-1 Lancer was stationed at Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota.

    After the incident, Ellsworth Air Force Base released a statement on Facebook, explaining, “An Air Force B-1B Lancer assigned to Ellsworth Air Force Base crashed at approximately 5:50 p.m. today while attempting to land on the installation.”

    Ellsworth Air Force Base officials noted that the B-1 Lancer bomber was participating in a “training mission” when the accident occurred on Thursday.

    “There were four aircrew on board. All four ejected safely,” Ellsworth Air Force Base officials added.

    According to the South Dakota Air Force base, a board of officers will handle the investigation into the cause of Thursday’s bomber accident. Ellsworth Air Force Base officials said additional details pertaining to the crash will “be provided as they become available.”

    READ MORE: Video: Chinese fighter jet harasses US B-52 bomber

    According to The Associated Press, airfield conditions recorded by automated weather reporting equipment indicated that visibility was poor, low clouds were present, and there were freezing temperatures in the area around the time of the B-1 Lancer bomber crash on Thursday.

    According to the Air Force’s website, the B-1 Lancer bomber is a “highly versatile, multi-mission weapon system” and is a “key element of any joint/composite strike force.”

    “Carrying the largest conventional payload of both guided and unguided weapons in the Air Force inventory, the multi-mission B-1 is the backbone of America’s long-range bomber force,” the Air Force states on its website. “It can rapidly deliver massive quantities of precision and non-precision weapons against any adversary, anywhere in the world, at any time.”

    According to The Associated Press, the Air Force currently has less than 60 B-1 Lancer bombers in service. A total of 100 B-1 Lancer bombers were originally constructed for the Air Force.



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  • Michael Jackson linked to Epstein in new court documents

    A newly released document links legendary pop singer Michael Jackson with Jeffrey Epstein, a wealthy sex offender.

    On Wednesday night, multiple documents were unsealed that revealed a list of high-profile names associated with the deceased sex offender. The list of Epstein’s associates was disclosed as the result of an order by U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska to release previously redacted files in Virginia Giuffre’s defamation lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell, a former Epstein associate.

    Giuffre filed a lawsuit against Maxwell in 2015, claiming that she was forced by both Epstein and Maxwell to have sex with multiple influential figures at the age of 17.

    According to The Daily Caller, Jackson’s name was mentioned in a deposition provided by Johanna Sjoberg in May of 2016. Sjoberg is an alleged victim of Epstein’s sex abuse operation.

    Asked if she had met “anybody famous” when she was with Epstein, Sjoberg said, “I met Michael Jackson.” When Sjoberg was asked where she met Jackson, she answered, “At his house in Palm Beach. At Jeffrey’s house in Palm Beach.” Sjoberg was also asked whether she massaged Jackson during the alleged encounter at Epstein’s house in Palm Beach. Sjoberg said she did not massage Jackson.

    READ MORE: Bill Clinton in Epstein filings 50+ times: Report

    According to CNN, Jackson died in 2009 as the result of a medication overdose that the pop star’s doctor said was regularly infused into Jackson to address his issue with insomnia.

    The Daily Caller reported that Jackson faced multiple child sexual abuse allegations throughout his career as a musician. Additionally, HBO released the “Leaving Neverland” two-part documentary in 2019, which outlined specific examples of Jackson’s alleged sexual abuse.

    The documentary’s summary states, “At the height of his stardom Michael Jackson began long-running relationships with two boys, aged 7 and 10. Now in their 30s, they tell the story of how they were sexually abused by Jackson, and how they came to terms with it years later.”

    Jackson’s alleged association with Epstein, revealed in the newly released documents, is only one example from the list of at least 150 associates that the courts have been releasing as part of the litigation between Giuffre and Maxwell. Other high-profile individuals mentioned in the redacted court filings include former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew.



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  • Iran deploys destroyer to tense Red Sea

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    The Iranian destroyer Alborz – a 51-year-old warship – has entered the tense Red Sea through the strategic Bab al-Mandeb Strait, Iranian state media reported on January 1.

    The Tasnim news agency, which has ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), said the move was connected to developments involving the Tehran-backed Huthi rebels operating in the region.

    The United States has established a multination naval task force to protect shipping in the region against Huthi attacks.



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  • Russian news outlet says data shows Putin signed record number of secret decrees in 2023

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    Almost one-half of the presidential decrees signed by Russian leader Vladimir Putin last year were done in secret, a local media outlet said, more than any other year on record.

    Mediazona said in a report on January 2 that according to its research based on data from Russia’s official publications website, 49.5 percent of the 997 decrees Putin signed were done in secret. The previous highest rate was by Putin in 2001, during the Second Chechen War, when 47 percent of all decrees were secret. The number of decrees signed in 2022, the first year of the Kremlin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, was 996, 45 percent of which were signed in secret.

    The independent news outlet said that secret decrees are often used to reward the military and pardon convicts who were promised to be freed from prison if they served a six-month term with the military in the war against Ukraine.

    In 2022 and 2023, data showed at least 17 people who committed murders were pardoned – all of them fought against Ukraine and then returned to Russia where they were granted their freedom.

    On June 13, Putin confirmed he signed a decree absolving convicts of their crimes, saying, “the state must do everything to fulfill its obligations” to those who agreed to serve at the front.

    Mediazona said it calculated the figures by looking at the registration numbers of the presidential decrees. Since they are done sequentially, the news outlet said that by totaling up the missing registration numbers, one could ascertain how many secret decrees were signed but never published.

    The Kremlin has not commented on the report.

    The return of convicts from the war — dead or alive — is causing controversy across Russia as the government recognizes them as heroes while victims and families suffering as a result of their preinvasion crimes stew in anger.

    There have been several cases of Russian families expressing outrage that the convicted killer of a loved one has been released and amnestied because they completed a tour of duty in Ukraine, and some neighborhoods live in fear of violent returnees. Some families are also irate over the state honors bestowed upon former inmates who don’t survive their stint in the war.



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  • More women accuse Nigel Lythgoe of sexual assault amid Paula Abdul lawsuit

    Two more women are accusing Nigel Lythgoe of sexual assault, just days after Paula Abdul filed a lawsuit claiming she was twice sexually assaulted by the former “So You Think You Can Dance” judge.

    Accusers Jane Doe K.G. and Jane Doe K.N., who were both “contestants” on the Lythgoe-produced show “All American Girl,” said they suffered sexual assault/battery, sexual harassment and negligence at the hands of Lythgoe after the series finale party in May 2003, according to the civil suit filed Tuesday and obtained by Deadline.

    The women are seeking a slew of damages in response to the complaint against Lythgoe, who is identified in the suit only as John Roe N.L.

    The suit accuses Lythgoe of having “openly swatted and groped Plaintiffs’ and other contestants’ buttocks.”

    He also, according to the suit, drove the pair to a home in Los Angeles following the aforementioned after-party instead of “the studio where everyone else was going.” There, Lythgoe “made sexual advances,” according to the complaint.

    Though the women rebuffed him, they say Lythgoe “persisted and continued making advances.” At one point, the filing alleges, Lythgoe “lifted his sweater over Plaintiff K.G.’s head and engulfed her in his sweater, attempting to kiss her and pushing her body close to his,” before she “scrambled to release herself from his grasp.”

    Ex-“Idol” judge Abdul, 61, filed a sexual assault and gender violence lawsuit last week alleging assault by Lythgoe, whom she says “was aware” his behavior was “inappropriate and even criminal,” per Deadline.

    The first alleged incident occurred in the early days of “Idol,” during which Abdul says Lythgoe “shoved” her “against the wall, then grabbed her genitals and breasts, and began shoving his tongue down her throat,” per People. Abdul didn’t want to lose her gig and opted against taking action at the time.

    Abdul says she was then assaulted by Lythgoe in 2015 during her stint judging “So You Think You Can Dance.” Lythgoe at the time is accused of having “forced himself on top of Abdul while she was seated on his couch” during what she believed to be a professional meeting. He then “attempted to kiss her while proclaiming they two would make an excellent ‘power couple.’”

    Lythgoe issued a statement over the holiday weekend denying Abdul’s allegations.

    While both claims were filed under California’s Sexual Abuse and Cover Up Accountability Act, allowing for civil lawsuits that would otherwise be precluded by the statute of limitations, only Abdul’s was filed before the act’s expiration on Dec. 31.

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    © 2024 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Tijuana concert canceled after grenades thrown outside of venue

    A New Year’s Eve concert featuring Mexican narco corridos vocal star Larry Hernández was canceled after three grenades were thrown outside the venue, Mexican authorities confirmed Tuesday. Narco corridos, which translates as “drug ballads,” are songs about Mexican drug cartels that often portray the cartels in a positive light and glorify their actions.

    On Sunday, people in a vehicle threw what appeared to be fragmentation grenades outside the Casa Blanca entertainment center in eastern Tijuana, authorities said.

    The devices did not detonate, and the Mexican army arrived on site to remove them, said Fernando Sánchez, Tijuana’s secretary of security and citizen protection. No arrests have been made, he said.

    Billboards advertising Hernández’s concert could still be seen outside the venue on Tuesday afternoon. A message alerting ticket-holders about refunds was posted at the venue’s box office, where people were showing up to ask for their money back.

    Evaristo Cabrales, a Tijuana resident, said he and his group arrived to the concert Sunday to find the commotion. “We saw a bunch of police and they didn’t let us in, so we had to leave,” Cabrales said.

    One of Hernández’s best-known releases is his 2009 breakthrough album, “16 Narco Corridos.” In 2015, he released “16 Narco Corridos Vol. 2.” The Los Angeles-born singer grew up in Pueblos Unidos-Estacion Opispo in Culiacán, a city in the state of Sinaloa, which was the home base of Mexican drug cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán. Guzmán is now serving a life sentence in a Colorado prison.

    Hernández’s concert is the latest in a series canceled last year in Tijuana. Peso Pluma and Fuerza Regida canceled their shows in October at the Caliente Stadium after banners with alleged threats signed with the initials of a drug cartel were found in the city.

    Baja California Gov. Marina del Pilar Ávila said that so far there is no indication of a direct threat either to Hernández or to the concert venue, and the case is under investigation.

    “Unfortunately because of the events that just happened at the place where I was going to perform tonight, it is impossible to do so,” Hernández said in a video posted on his Facebook account. “These are things that are out of one’s control, so I apologize and send you a hug.”

    In November, the Tijuana City Council unanimously approved a municipal code to ban narco corridos from being played in public.

    The regulation imposes a sanction of up to 1 million pesos — around $60,000 — on anyone who “broadcasts, exhibits, displays, shows, performs or reproduces music, videos, images or any other similar that promotes the culture of violence or advocates crime or the perpetrators of illicit acts in the presentation of public shows or entertainment.”

    “If they come to sing other types of music, they are welcome,” Caballero said at the time in a Facebook Live video prior to the city council meeting.

    Sánchez noted Tuesday that the concerts that have been canceled in Tijuana share a similarity of being by performers who sometimes sing music that glorifies crime.

    “In Tijuana there were more than 300 concerts throughout the year where absolutely nothing happened,” he added.

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    © 2024 The San Diego Union-Tribune

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • These tech companies eyeing expansion are finding luck in Ireland

    In 2019, Chicago software company ActiveCampaign decided to open an office in Europe to be closer to international clients. The fast-growing startup did more than half its business internationally, and a new satellite office in Sydney, Australia, was proving to be too far from European markets.

    The customer experience automation company opened its second international office — in Dublin, Ireland. What started as an office with 50 employees doubled to 100 in its first year.

    In another two years, ActiveCampaign Dublin had become a global business center with more than 300 employees.

    “Dublin is a good example of where it’s not just like one function that we set up there,” said ActiveCampaign CEO Jason VandeBoom. “It’s only been growing in terms of the different types of roles that we can do from that hub.”

    ActiveCampaign is one of more than 50 Chicago businesses that have expanded or relocated to Ireland. Today, about 1,000 American companies employ about 17,000 people in Ireland.

    “Chicago has been hugely important,” said Paul Veale, who represents IDA, the investment and development agency of the Irish government, in the Midwest and the South. “(Chicago companies) are very, very huge contributors to both Ireland and the Irish economy.”

    IDA has about 300 employees worldwide. The agency has a hand in most of the new sites that are opened in Ireland by international corporations. It has nine offices in the United States, including one in Chicago that opened in 1965, and employees help with everything from finding land to boosting public relations.

    “I always say our job is to eliminate the speed bumps, or the barriers to being successful,” Veale said.

    Many United States companies in Ireland focus on software and other products that can be transmitted digitally, without having to get into imports and exports. Still, life sciences companies are the biggest players in Irish American commerce, Veale said.

    Abbott Laboratories and Horizon Therapeutics, both headquartered in the Chicago area, have operated factories around Ireland for decades. Horizon’s global headquarters is in Dublin.

    Other corporations that are headquartered in Illinois and have locations in Ireland include Aon, Illinois Tool Works and Molex. But it’s the recent migration of Chicago-based tech startups that Veale finds the most exciting.

    ActiveCampaign worked closely with the IDA before its Dublin hub opened, VandeBoom said. The IDA set up meetings between ActiveCampaign staff and managers at other American companies in both Cork and Dublin in Ireland.

    “It’s been a constant sort of source of them having a presence there, which felt like far more of a partnership than some of the other regions that we operate with,” VandeBoom said. “We were able to spend time with actual companies that have started up within the last couple of years in the region. They were able to give us some insights on cities.”

    Chicago unicorn startup G2, a digital platform for reviewing and comparing software, also started working with the IDA as talks of expanding into Europe grew serious.

    After visiting Dublin and meeting with industry peers in the area, G2 Vice President Gordon Tobin and his team felt right at home.

    “The density of technical talent that exists within Ireland … the English-speaking country within the Eurozone that has access to all the common markets … there’s a natural advantage there,” Tobin said.

    “We made a certain decision that Ireland’s going to be the place we were going to continue to grow from,” Tobin said.

    Tobin relocated to Dublin in 2021 to begin hiring employees. G2 formally opened its Dublin office in April 2023.

    Besides Dublin and Chicago, G2 also operates from London, Singapore and Bangalore. The hardest part of working between cities, Tobin said, is the time difference. For connecting the United States and Ireland, early afternoon calls from Dublin are a favorite, catching Chicago employees in the morning.

    Tech companies that move to Ireland tend to recruit heavily from local universities, Veale said, and some even get a say in their curriculum. Telecom giant Ericsson has collaborated with Irish schools on classes up to the Ph.D. level, and cloud computing courses have become popular in the last decade, Veale said.

    “Particularly if you’re based out of Dublin, companies have the opportunity to work with universities to maybe shape the course contents, to ensure that those coming out of universities have the skill sets that you’re looking for,” Veale said.

    As a former student at University College Dublin, Tobin experienced the career-focused Irish university system himself. He said Dublin’s talent pool made it an attractive site for expansion.

    “That was always a key piece, that we knew a wealth of talent already existed here,” Tobin said. “You’ve got a very strong educational system in place. … You also have a great pipeline going in from all around the world. ”

    Membership in the European Union makes it easier for companies in Ireland to headhunt from other European global headquarters, Veale said, while cutting down on visa processing times. Someone who would be an H1-B visa holder in the U.S. might not be approved to work for several months, while an Irish equivalent would take four to six weeks.

    Bringing international talent to Ireland on a shorter timeline was a major draw for ActiveCampaign.

    “f you’re building a platform that’s going to be so wide, so horizontal, like the platform that we’ve built, like it would be kind of strange to restrict our talent to like Chicago,” VandeBoom said.

    Some companies choose to move to Ireland because it’s an English-speaking country in Europe, Veale said. Europe’s large population compared with the U.S. makes it a crucial market for G2. The company’s activities in Europe — which are largely coordinated by the Dublin office — account for 17% of total revenue.

    Veale has also found that Chicago and Ireland share several cultural similarities, including a growing biotechnology sector, a common language and a taste for Irish food and holidays.

    “On St. Patty’s Day, you know, it doesn’t take a genius to know the Chicago River turns green,” Veale said. “Everybody celebrates it, but we always bring a prominent member of the Irish government over.”

    For some companies, branching out to Ireland also has a financial advantage. Ireland and America have an agreement preventing double income tax on labor, making them attractive business partners for companies of various sizes.

    The agreement ensures that American citizens working in Ireland — and American businesses with Irish satellite offices staffed by locals — aren’t paying income tax to both countries at the same time. Both America and Ireland have similar agreements with several other nations.

    The Irish government also offers tax credits to some international businesses as an incentive for setting up shop. Corporations are eligible for a tax cut matching up to 25% of their research and development budget for new projects housed in Ireland, on top of a 12.5% corporate tax deduction.

    Veale credits the COVID-19 pandemic with expanding Ireland and Chicago’s connection in the startup landscape. People became more comfortable with relocating and with investing in remote work, he said.

    “People are a bit more intrigued and more willing to say, ‘Can we have a quick 15, 20-minute call?’” Veale said.

    While many Chicago companies in Ireland are based in large university cities such as Dublin and Cork, those with deep roots are starting to expand. Abbott, which came to Ireland in 1946, now operates in 10 locations. Most recently, the medical device giant broke ground on a diabetes care product factory in Kilkenny, opening in 2024.

    The IDA hopes that people who move to Ireland for work will build community there, Veale said. Since the whole country is roughly the size of Indiana, new jobs in city centers also bolster the environment in commuter towns.

    “You can create sustainable employment for people that allows them to stay in Ireland and allow small communities and towns to survive and thrive,” Veale said.

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    © 2024 Chicago Tribune

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Ramaswamy roasts media over ‘white supremacy’ question

    Vivek Ramaswamy, a presidential candidate in the 2024 Republican primary, said he refused to “bend the knee” to “woke-ism” in response to a Washington Post reporter’s question about white supremacy during an Iowa campaign event on Tuesday. The GOP candidate also criticized mainstream media for dividing the country.

    The Washington Post reporter asked Ramaswamy whether he condemned “white supremacy and white nationalism” after the 2024 presidential candidate received the endorsement of former Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa).

    According to The New York Times, King has been accused of racism for statements some people have claimed appear to be accepting of white supremacy.

    Ramaswamy shared a video of his answer to the reporter’s question on X, formerly Twitter, stating, “After Steve King announced he was endorsing me, predictably a lame reporter from @WaPo tried to get me to play the game of ‘denouncing white supremacy,’ while she refused to actually define ‘white supremacy’ which in recent years encompasses concepts like ‘punctuality’ & ‘the written word.’ I refused to play along with her game.”

    In the video, Ramaswamy explained, “Of course I condemn any form of vicious racial discrimination in this country. But I think that the presumption of your question is fundamentally based on a falsehood that that really is the main form of racial discrimination we see in this country today.”

    The 2024 presidential candidate suggested that institutionalized racism in America is “based on affirmative action” since affirmative action discriminates against individuals on the basis of “the color of their skin.”

    READ MORE: Video: Ramaswamy gives scathing rebuke of mainstream media

    Ramaswamy pointed to the Jussie Smollett incident, criticizing the media for reporting a false case of racism that eventually was discovered to have been a paid set-up by the actor. Ramaswamy told the media to “stop picking on this farce of some figment that exists at some infinitesimally small fringe of the American public today.”

    When the Washington Post reporter claimed that Ramaswamy did not answer the original question, the GOP candidate replied, “Do I condemn vicious racial discrimination? Yes, I do. Am I gonna play your silly game of ‘gotcha’? No, I’m not, and frankly this is why people have lost trust.”

    “I’m not pledging allegiance to your new religion of modern woke-ism,” Ramaswamy added. “I’m not gonna bend the knee to your religion,” he added.

    The 2024 presidential candidate told the press that mainstream media is “responsible” for “dividing this country to a breaking point” and “creating a projection of national division.”

    “You want to know what the best way is to end discrimination on the basis of race?” Ramaswamy asked. “Stop discriminating on the basis of race. Do that and we’re gonna to move this country forward.”



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  • Felon tackles, attacks judge in court

    A Las Vegas judge was attacked by a three-time felon during a court sentencing on Wednesday. Video footage captured the incident, which involved the repeat felon jumping over the bench, tackling the judge, and fighting with court officers.

    According to KLAS, 30-year-old Deobra Redden appeared in court Wednesday to be sentenced by Judge Mary Kay Holthus for a charge of attempted battery that resulted in substantial bodily harm. While Redden’s attorney requested that Holthus sentence the repeat felon to probation, the Las Vegas judge denied the probation request.

    “I think it’s time he got a taste of something else because I just can’t with that history,” Holthus stated.

    The judge’s decision prompted Redden to lunge over the judge’s bench, tackle Holthus, and engage in a lengthy fight with court officials, who attempted to wrestle the repeat felon to the ground in an effort to protect Holthus.

    Video footage of Wednesday’s incident posted on social media shows the moments prior to Redden’s attack, the moment the felon rushed toward the bench, the chaos that erupted in the courtroom, and the quick response of the court officials. The video footage also shows both the American flag and the Nevada state flag being knocked down in the attack.

    KLAS reported that Holthus hit her head during the attack on Wednesday. A spokesperson for the court confirmed that Holthus was “being monitored” in the aftermath of the incident. KLAS also reported that a court marshal received an injury on his forehead. The court marshal was transported to a local hospital, but was listed in stable condition.

    READ MORE: Judge shot and killed in his driveway

    In a statement obtained by KLAS, Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson said, “Thank God the judge is okay. Thank God for the heroic efforts of those who came to her aid, especially her marshal and her law clerk. Without them, the situation would have been much worse as this defendant exhibited extremely violent behavior and I’m confident there will be consequences.”

    Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford also released a statement Wednesday, saying, “Sending our sincerest well wishes to District Court Judge Mary Kay Holthus and the marshal injured in her courtroom today. Your dedication to justice and the court are truly commendable. We wish you both a swift recovery.”

    KLAS reported that Redden has previously been sentenced to probation multiple times and has been convicted of nine misdemeanors and three felonies. In 2012, Redden was convicted of assaulting a family member. Additionally, Redden received three convictions for domestic battery in 2013.

    Redden was granted parole in 2022 after spending a year in prison in 2021 due to a domestic battery charge. Finally, the repeat felon threatened “to bust the kneecaps” of an individual last April, which resulted in “substantial bodily harm,” according to court documents obtained by KLAS.



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  • Taliban closes Education Ministry Department, creating uncertainty for thousands

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    The Taliban’s hard-line Islamist government in Afghanistan has eliminated the Monitoring and Evaluation Department in the Education Ministry, a move that threatens the jobs of more than 5,000 people in Kabul and across the country and further erodes secular education in Afghanistan.

    The department was tasked with monitoring the quality of teaching in public and private schools in Afghanistan and has workers in all 34 provinces.

    It is unclear whether the employees who lost their jobs will be transferred to other jobs, keep their jobs within a renamed department, or be left jobless.

    “This step is tragic and has made us destitute,” Idris Ehsaas, one of the affected employees, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi. But he noted that the Taliban-led government could still transfer employees to schools, universities, and other educational institutions where they are needed.

    Khayal Mohammad, another employee who lost his job, said some of the laid-off workers were promised they would be transferred to a new branch called the Professional Development Department.

    “But only a small number of people from the Monitoring and Evaluation Department would be absorbed into this new department,” he said.

    Taliban government officials and spokesmen did not respond to repeated requests for comment about the disbanding of the department.

    But one Education Ministry employee said the Taliban had merely changed the name of the department to the Professional Development Department.

    The ministry employee, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, added that former employees of the Monitoring and Evaluation Department will continue be employed within the new office.

    Since returning to power in August 2021, the Taliban has retained a large number of the civilian employees it inherited from the previous pro-Western Afghan government but essentially disbanded its security forces.

    The Islamist group has, however, imposed draconian restrictions and bans on secular education.

    It has also banned women and teenage girls from schools and universities and converted many secular schools to madrasahs. Last week, the Taliban said that it would allow girls of all ages to study in madrasahs.

    In a report released earlier this month, the global rights watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the Taliban had caused “irreversible damage” to the education of both Afghan boys and girls.

    “By harming the whole school system in the country, they risk creating a lost generation deprived of a quality education,” said Sahar Fetrat, a women’s rights researcher at HRW and the report’s author.



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