Taliban Affirms Iranian Technical Delegation Inspected Water Scarcity at the Helmand River

Iranian President's envoy to Afghanistan meets Amir Khan Muttaqi in Kabul in May. (IRNA)
Iranian President's envoy to Afghanistan meets Amir Khan Muttaqi in Kabul in May. (IRNA)
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Taliban Affirms Iranian Technical Delegation Inspected Water Scarcity at the Helmand River

Iranian President's envoy to Afghanistan meets Amir Khan Muttaqi in Kabul in May. (IRNA)
Iranian President's envoy to Afghanistan meets Amir Khan Muttaqi in Kabul in May. (IRNA)

The Foreign Ministry of the Taliban government announced Sunday that an Iranian technical delegation has inspected the water situation in the Helmand River, amid an ongoing dispute over water rights between both countries.

“Iranian experts have observed the water levels in the Helmand River,” Iranian news agencies cited the country’s special envoy for Afghanistan, Hassan Kazemi Qomi, as saying.

Qomi said the delegation is currently in Kabul and will soon share its assessment with Tehran.

It is the first time Iranian experts visit the Deh Rawood hydrometric station of the Helmand River to inspect the water level.

Later, the Foreign Ministry of the Taliban government said in a statement that an Iranian technical delegation visited the Deh Rawood hydrometric station to analyze the level of water.

“After the observation, the Iranian delegation found that the Helmand River has a minimum water flow and its tributaries are completely dry and only flow in flood situations. Therefore, it has become very difficult for Helmand River water to reach the delta area [in Iran],” the statement said.

Also, based on the analysis, it can be clearly seen that no human act is involved in the water flow decrease to Iran, the statement read.

The state-run ISNA news agency quoted an official at the Iranian Energy Ministry as saying that since the two countries signed an agreement to share water in 1973, it was the first time a team of Iranian experts visited a station at the Helmand River.

Iran signed an agreement in 1973 for Afghanistan to supply a stipulated amount of water in “normal” climate conditions from the Helmand, a more than 1,000-kilometer waterway that runs from the Afghan Hindu Kush mountains through the country and into Iran.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that tension has prevailed over the Iran-Afghanistan borders that span over 900 kilometers upon pressures put by Tehran on the government of “Taliban” regarding the former’s share of water from the Helmand River that flows into Hamun Lake in Iranian Baluchestan province.

In mid-May, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi issued a warning to the Taliban: honor Afghanistan’s water-supply agreement or face the consequences.

A well-known Taliban figure offered a mocking gift of a 20-liter water container in response and told him to stop making terrifying ultimatums.

About a week later, a skirmish erupted on the border, leaving two Iranian guards and one Taliban member dead. The Taliban sent thousands of troops and hundreds of suicide bombers to the area, a person familiar with the matter told Bloomberg, claiming the group is prepared for war with Iran over a water dispute.

The editorial of the Iranian reformist Ham-Mihan newspaper had strongly attacked the Taliban, warning of “serious security conflicts” between Iran and the Afghan movement.

Heshmatullah Falahatpisheh, a former member of parliament and chairman of the body's Foreign Policy Commission, said that more than 1.5 million Afghans with a military background entered Iranian territory after the Taliban took over.

He claimed that 10,000 Afghan migrants enter Iranian territory every day, and also mentioned the presence of one Afghan for every 8 Iranians. Falahatpisheh then warned of a demographic change in some cities.

Meanwhile, the Iranian website, Tebyan, revealed that “Iran has relinquished part of its territory to the Taliban.”

In the past days, a photo circulated on social media showed Iran building a wall on the borders between the two countries.

Tebyan said that farmers in the Sistan region in the northern Iranian province of Baluchestan lost 2,000 hectares due to the security wall being built by the Iranian authorities with the aim of countering drug smugglers from Afghanistan.



Russia Launches New Year Drone Strike on Kyiv

A handout photo made available by the State Emergency Service shows Ukrainian rescuers working at the site of a drone attack on a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, 01 January 2025, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. EPA/STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE HANDOUT
A handout photo made available by the State Emergency Service shows Ukrainian rescuers working at the site of a drone attack on a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, 01 January 2025, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. EPA/STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE HANDOUT
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Russia Launches New Year Drone Strike on Kyiv

A handout photo made available by the State Emergency Service shows Ukrainian rescuers working at the site of a drone attack on a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, 01 January 2025, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. EPA/STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE HANDOUT
A handout photo made available by the State Emergency Service shows Ukrainian rescuers working at the site of a drone attack on a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, 01 January 2025, amid the ongoing Russian invasion. EPA/STATE EMERGENCY SERVICE HANDOUT

Russia launched a drone strike on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv early on Wednesday, wounding at least three people and damaging buildings in two districts, city officials said.

Explosions boomed across the morning sky shortly after Ukraine's air force warned of drones approaching the city.

Mayor Vitali Klitschko said air-defenses were repelling an enemy attack, and that two floors of a residential building had been partially destroyed in the strike.

Debris had also damaged a non-residential premise in another neighborhood, he said.

Russia has carried out regular airstrikes on Ukrainian towns and cities far behind the front line of its nearly three-year-old invasion.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said late on Tuesday that no one would give peace to his country as a gift, but he believed the United States would stand alongside Kyiv.

Zelenskiy, in a slick 21-minute New Year video greeting to his compatriots, also said only a strong Ukraine could secure peace and earn worldwide respect.

"We know that peace will not be given to us as a gift, but we will do everything to stop Russia and end the war, something each of us desires," Zelenskiy said against a backdrop of the blue-and-yellow national flag, battlefield scenes and pictures of children.
He recalled conversations with outgoing US President Joe Biden, President-elect Donald Trump and "everyone who supports us in the United States.”

"I have no doubt that the new American president wants and will be able to bring peace and end (Russian President Vladimir) Putin's aggression," Zelenskiy said.
"He understands that the former is impossible without the latter. Because this is not a street brawl where the two sides need to be pacified. This is a full-scale aggression by a deranged state against a civilized one. And I believe that, together with the United States, we are capable of the strength to force Russia into a just peace."
Russia, Zelenskiy said, was not to be trusted either in battle or in talks.
"If today Russia shakes your hand, it doesn't mean that tomorrow the same hand will not start killing you," he said. "Russians fear those who are free. What they don't understand. They fear freedom."