SECURITY — March 28, 2026
Taliban Minister Meets Nuristan Tribal Elders on Road and Public Issues
Sheikh Mohammad Khalid Hanafi, Minister of Enjoining Good and Forbidding Wrong, met with Nuristan's governor and tribal elders to discuss local problems including road closures. Residents in eastern districts face shortages after nearly a month of closed roads, with officials citing natural causes while others attribute them to Pakistani shelling.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Afghanistan International — corroborated by Khaama Press and RTA — 2 min read

Sheikh Mohammad Khalid Hanafi, the Minister of Enjoining Good and Forbidding Wrong, met with Nuristan's governor and tribal elders to discuss the general situation in the province, public problems and challenges with roads and highways.
Hanafi assured participants that the issues would be addressed and emphasized the responsibility of the Islamic system to resolve citizens' concerns. The tribal elders appreciated the ministry's engagement and called for additional such meetings in the future.
Residents of eastern Nuristan, particularly in Kamdesh and Barg-i-Matal districts, have demanded the reopening of roads closed for nearly a month. The closures have caused severe shortages of food and fuel, raising fears of a humanitarian disaster if the situation persists.
Taliban officials attributed the closures to natural causes such as rain and promised to take action. Local sources reported that the road closures resulted from clashes, shelling and rocket attacks by Pakistani border forces.
Some observers speculated that Pakistan may be seeking to aid anti-Taliban forces, a claim denied by Islamabad. Hanafi committed to raising the matters with relevant authorities to work toward solutions.
Read the original reporting at Afghanistan International →
Reliability assessment
Three independent outlets (Afghanistan International, Khaama Press, RTA) corroborate the meeting between named Taliban Minister Sheikh Mohammad Khalid Hanafi, Nuristan's governor, and tribal elders to discuss road and public issues; core event reliably attributed with on-record details from public figures.
The source language mixes facts with framing or advocacy wording. Afghanistan International: "danger of humanitarian disaster" (emotional framing of potential crisis); "possibility of these districts falling into the hands of Pakistani forces" (evokes fear of territorial loss); "effort to create a route or connection line for opponents of the Taliban" (speculative advocacy suggesting hostile intent).
Independent web corroboration
A separate web search returned 8 matching reports. A selection:
According to them, instead of relying only on the Paprook Kotal alternative route, the government should work to reopen the main road and prevent Pakistani forces from blocking it and targeting Afghan civilians.
Across the newsrooms
Where reports agree
- Both sources confirm a meeting occurred between Khalid Hanafi and Nuristan governor/tribal elders
- The meeting focused on people's problems in Nuristan with particular attention to road and transportation challenges
- Khalid Hanafi committed to addressing the reported problems and improving living conditions
Where reports differ
- Afghanistan International reports road closures caused by Pakistani military attacks citing local sources and warns of humanitarian disaster, while RTA's coverage of the ministry statement makes no reference to Pakistan, attacks, or specific districts
- Afghanistan International states the ministry announcement attributes issues to natural factors and rain, whereas RTA does not mention any cause for the road problems
- Only Afghanistan International mentions risks of districts falling to Pakistani forces or creating routes for Taliban opponents, along with Pakistani official denials
Filed by 3 outlets
Afghanistan International
Originating
Framed
Framed
Khaama Press
Framed
Framed
RTA
Reported straight
Reported straight
Filed under
Security — Nuristan, Khalid Hanafi, Pakistan, Road closures, Taliban ministry
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