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U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday his administration was working towards a fair deal with Iran, hours after the Senate voted to direct him t...
A British couple who were detained by the Taliban in Afghanistan in February have been released and flown to Doha following Qatari mediation, an official with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Friday.
Barbie and Peter Reynolds, whose family had voiced serious concerns over their health and their ability to survive Taliban custody, were detained by the group's interior ministry on 1 February.
Qatar was in talks with Taliban authorities for several months, in coordination with the British government and the couple's family, to secure their release, the official said.
"Throughout their eight months in detention – during which they were largely held separately – the Qatari embassy in Kabul provided them with critical support, including access to their doctor, delivery of medication, and regular communication with their family," the official added.
Afghanistan "does not view issues related to citizens from a political or transactional perspective," Qahar Balkhi, the spokesperson for Afghanistan's foreign ministry, said on social media platform X.
He added that the couple violated Afghan laws, without giving details.
Britain's special envoy to Afghanistan, Richard Lindsay, speaking to Sky News, thanked Qatar and said the couple were very happy when asked about their state.
He said he was not clear on what grounds they were held.
"It's obviously up to the authorities here to determine why they were detained, but we are very grateful that at least, today is a very great humanitarian day, that they will be reunited wth their family," he said.
Afghan authorities arrested four individuals: two British nationals, one Chinese-American and their interpreter, a spokesperson for the interior ministry told Reuters at the time.
The BBC, citing official Taliban sources, reported in February that two British nationals believed to be working for a non-governmental organisation in the central Afghan province of Bamiyan had been detained.
It cited one official as saying they had been arrested after using a plane without informing local authorities.
The couple were arrested alongside a Chinese-American friend, Faye Hall, and a translator from their training business, Britain's PA news agency reported.
Qatar has worked to secure the release of foreigners detained in Afghanistan since the Taliban came to power in 2021. The Gulf Arab state's negotiators have helped to secure the release of at least three Americans so far in 2025.
Western countries, including Britain and the United States, shut their embassies and withdrew their diplomats as the Taliban took over Afghanistan in 2021.
Britain advises its nationals against any travel to Afghanistan, warning of the risks of being detained.
The British couple had been running projects in schools in Afghanistan for 18 years, deciding to stay even after the Taliban seized power, according to the Sunday Times.
At least thirteen people have died and sixty-six have been injured following an explosion at Qatar's main liquefied natural gas (LNG) processing hub at Ras Laffan, authorities said on Sunday.
Tehran has agreed to let the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) recommence inspections of its nuclear programme, U.S. Vice President JD Vance has said. The U.S. and Iran have settled on a 60-day roadmap aimed at reaching a final deal, according to mediators Qatar and Pakistan.
Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed on a landmark internet deal that will allow traffic to pass through Azerbaijani networks.It's the latest deal to highlight the ongoing peace process between the two countries.
A Ukrainian strike has damaged a school building in a Russian-controlled area of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region, according to local authorities cited by the TASS news agency. No injuries were reported in the incident.
Three students have been killed and at least seven injured after two of their peers opened fire in a high school in the Philippines, police said. A spokesperson for the police said the two suspects, aged 14 and 15, had been arrested and a police pistol confiscated. Bullying is a possible motive.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has ordered the construction of two new 5,000-tonne warships every year over the next five years, signalling one of the country’s most ambitious naval expansion plans to date.
Google-owned YouTube has settled a lawsuit brought by a teenage plaintiff who claimed the platform harmed his mental health, avoiding what would have been the second California trial over allegations that social media companies fuel youth addiction.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to allow a Rastafarian inmate to pursue a damages claim against Louisiana prison officials who forcibly shaved his head in alleged violation of his religious beliefs, ruling that federal law does not permit such lawsuits against individual officers.
Russia has accused the United States of failing to follow through on what Moscow describes as “understandings” reached between Presidents Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump during their Alaska summit last year, in a sign of mounting frustration in the Kremlin.
Bangladesh has called for increased climate financing and faster delivery of support to vulnerable nations, arguing that current global funding commitments fall far short of what developing countries need to tackle the growing impacts of climate change.
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