Speaking on TF-1 evening news show, French President Emmanuel Macron said that discussions his country is having with the Taliban about the evacuation of French nationals and Afghans in danger do not mean recognition of the group as Afghanistan's new authorities.
"...We have to have these discussions from a practical point of view. This does not mean there will be recognition. We have set conditions," Macron said.
Male and female students in Afghanistan will study in separate classrooms, the TOLOnews broadcaster reported on Sunday, citing the Taliban-appointed (banned in Russia) acting higher education minister, Abdul Baqi Haqqani.
Speaking at a higher education conference in Kabul, Haqqani said that girls had the right to education but cannot study in the same classrooms with boys.
He also vowed that universities would soon reopen and that teachers and the ministry staff would be paid salaries.
The conference brought together university professors, academics and former ministry officials.
Women's rights under the Taliban remain an issue of concern. Earlier in August, the Islamist movement said that women would be allowed to study and work as well as take part in governmental activities. On Tuesday, the Taliban said that female state officials would be able to resume their work after necessary regulations are worked out.
However, according to the United Nations and media reports, the movement has already forbidden women in several parts of Afghanistan to work or leave their homes without being accompanied by a male relative.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Sunday that Ankara supported France's idea of creating an UN-controlled "safe zone" in Kabul with the participation of international peacekeepers.
French President Emmanuel Macron said on Saturday that Paris and London would be holding talks on Monday to discuss the creation of a "safe zone" in the Afghan capital to allow for humanitarian operations to continue.
"We receive interesting proposals from France on sending peacekeepers to Afghanistan. ... If such forces are created, they should be formed by the UN with the participation of different countries," Cavusoglu said at a joint press conference with his German counterpart, Heiko Maas, who is visiting Turkey.
US President Joe Biden was heading to Dover Air Base on Sunday to receive the bodies of 13 US servicemen killed in a suicide bomb attack near Kabul airport on Thursday.
Families of those troops are also expected to attend the ceremony.
The Taliban (a terrorist group, banned in Russia) have cut off telephone lines and internet services in Panjshir province, the last remaining hotbed of resistance in Afghanistan, to block the internal communications between the resistance forces formed after the militants took over the rest of the country in mid-August, national media reported on Sunday.
The Raha Press news agency reported that the Taliban were trying to prevent Afghan Vice President Amrullah Saleh, who declared himself caretaker president, from sharing his messages on Twitter.
Other Afghan media reported, citing sources, that the radical group was exerting "psychological pressure" on Panjshir, as it believes attacking the valley would be easier with the lack of communication.
On Saturday, the Russian Ambassador to Kabul Dmitry Zhirnov said that the Taliban could take over the Panjshir province within hours but wanted to avoid bloodshed.
US Congress member Seth Moulton said that the actions of the United States in Afghanistan had shocked him, as the evacuation should have been started earlier.
Moulton visited Kabul on Tuesday without informing the authorities. The risky trip was condemned by the departments of state and defence.
"There's one very simple order, which would have been to start this evacuation months ago," the official told the Axios news portal.
The official also criticized the US decision to vacate the Bagram military airbase — its key base in Afghanistan — in July.
"Why on earth would you give up our primary airfield when you know we have to evacuate tens of thousands of people? It just blew my mind," Moulton commented.
The United States would have failed to fly "thousands" of people out of Afghanistan, even if they had remained in the country till September 11, as it was initially planned, according to the congressman, because the evacuation started too late.
On Sunday, US officials told The Washington Post that US President Joe Biden was planning to evacuate all the diplomatic mission by Tuesday. About 2,000 people were airlifted by the US and coalition forces within the past 12 hours, according to the White House.
The Taliban (a terrorist group, outlawed in Russia) has announced that sports activities will resume in Afghanistan, Afghan broadcaster 1TV reported on Sunday.
The precise date of the resumption is unknown yet.
The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan has upended life in the Central Asian country, including sports. This, however, does not mean the country has nothing to report sports-wise as two Afghan athletes, Zakia Khudadadi and Hossain Rasouli, arrived on Saturday in Tokyo to participate in the 2020 Paralympic Games. The athletes were evacuated from Afghanistan last weekend and spent a week in Paris until departing for Tokyo.
The last plane from Afghanistan with UK troops on board has landed in the United Kingdom, Sky News reported on Sunday.
The UK Ministry of Defence announced earlier that the plane had departed from Kabul airport.
Now the aircraft has arrived at the Brize Norton airbase, according to the UK broadcaster.
The central bank of Afghanistan has instructed the country's private banks to resume their operations while limiting withdrawal of funds to $200 a week per person, Afghan Khaama Press news agency reported on Sunday, citing the central bank's directive.
The country's banking system has been shut down since the Taliban (a terrorist group, banned in Russia) seized power in the middle of the month. The ensuing financial difficulties prompted a Saturday protest in Kabul against the closure of banks.
According to the news agency, the withdrawal limit also applies to international banks and will be a temporary measure.
"We are waiting for the final nod from the Americans to secure full control over Kabul airport," Taliban official said on condition of anonymity.