Events in the year 2024 in Afghanistan.
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January
- January 4 – A spokesman for the Vice and Virtue Ministry of the Taliban announces the arrest of an undetermined number of women for wearing "bad hijab", in the first known crackdown on dress code since their return to power in August 2021.[1]
- January 20 – A chartered Dassault Falcon 10 aircraft flying from Thailand to Russia crashes in Kuf Ab District, Badakhshan Province, killing two of the six people on board.[2][3]
- January 29 – Ten collisions occur on the main highway linking Kabul and Nangarhar Province, killing 17 people and wounding ten more. Separately, fifteen people are killed during four collisions in Laghman Province, near the end of the same highway.[4]
February
- February 19 – A landslide in Nuristan Province buries the village of Nakre in the Tatin Valley and leaves at least 25 people dead.[5]
- February 20 – March 13 – At least 60 people are killed and 23 others are injured due to flooding and adverse weather conditions involving snow and rain nationwide.[6]
April
- April 12-14 – At least 33 people are killed and 27 others are injured in flash floods caused by heavy rain in 20 provinces nationwide including in Kabul.[11]
- April 17 – The Taliban orders the suspension of the television channels Noor TV and Barya TV for allegedly failing to “consider national and Islamic values”.[12]
- April 20 – One person is killed and three others are injured in a car bombing at a predominantly Hazara neighborhood in Kabul.[13]
- April 29 – Six people are killed after a gunman opens fire inside a Shiite mosque in Guzara District, Herat Province.[14]
July
- July 15 –
- July 30 – The Taliban suspends relations with 14 Afghan overseas diplomatic missions and announces that they will no longer accept consular documents issued by these missions.[25]
August
- August 5 – The Taliban allows foreigners inside the country on visas issued by the former government to stay, while those with visas but are outside Afghanistan would not be allowed to enter without documents from a Taliban-approved diplomatic mission.[26]
- August 11 – At least one person is killed and eleven others are injured in a IED explosion in Dasht-e-Barchi, Kabul,[27] that is claimed by the Islamic State.[28]
- August 13 – Three Afghan civilians are killed during clashes between the Taliban and Pakistani forces at the Torkham border crossing.[29]
- August 17 – Uzbekistani Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov becomes the highest ranking foreign official to visit Afghanistan since the return of the Taliban in 2021.[30]
- August 20 –
- The Taliban bans United Nations special rapporteur on human rights to Afghanistan Richard Bennett from entering the country for spreading "propaganda".[31]
- The Taliban's virtue ministry dismisses 281 members of the security force for failing to grow a beard and announces that they also destroyed 21,328 musical instruments in the past year and prevented thousands of computer operators from selling "immoral and unethical" films in markets.[32]
- August 21 – The Taliban issues new laws on vice and virtue severely curtailing women's rights.[33]
- August 29 – The Taliban bans mixed martial arts, saying it is too violent and has a risk of death and that it is incompatible with Islamic law.[34]
September
- September 2 – Six people are killed and 13 others are injured in a suicide bombing in the Qala Bakhtiar neighbourhood of Kabul. The Islamic State takes responsibility the following day.[35]
- September 12 – Fifteen Hazaras are killed and six others are injured in a gun attack in Daykundi Province. The Islamic State takes responsibility.[36]
- September 16 – The United Nations announces the suspension of the country's polio vaccination program by the Taliban.[37]
- September 17 – The Taliban announces the reopening of the Afghan embassy in Muscat, Oman.[38]
- September 22 – Iran summons the acting head of Afghanistan's embassy after saying that a visiting Afghan official disrespected the country's national anthem by not standing during a performance of the anthem, days after a similar incident occurred in Pakistan. The Afghan delegate apologizes, claiming that this was because the public performance of music is banned by the Taliban.[39]
- September 27 – The Afghan embassy in London closes down following an "official request" by the United Kingdom's Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, according to Ambassador Zalmai Rassoul. However, the FCO says that the decision to close the embassy was made by the "State of Afghanistan".[40]
October
- October 23 – Eleven people are injured in an explosion at a market in the Pamir Cinema neighbourhood of Kabul.[41]
- October 24 – Helmand Province imposes a ban on the broadcast, filming and taking of images of living things.[42]
- January 4 – Nur Ahmed Nur, 87, politician, minister of the interior (1978).[45]
- May 29 – Qayum Karzai, 77, politician, MP (2004–2008).[46]
- June 4 – Ahmad Shah Khan, Crown Prince of Afghanistan, 89, royal, head of the House of Barakzai (since 2007).[47]