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Taliban Denies Presence Of Chinese Troops In Bagram

Taliban denies presence of Chinese troops in Bagram airfield, know how the rumor has spread.

There has been news of the presence of foreign troops at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan. Meanwhile, the Taliban denies all such reports.

According to local media reports, the Taliban have denied reports of the presence of foreign troops at the Bagram airfield in Afghanistan.

According to TOLOnews, Omar Mansoor, a member of the Cultural Commission, said, ‘There are currently no foreign troops, including Chinese, in Afghanistan.”

Let us tell you that on Saturday night, residents of Bagram told that light was seen in the base for the first time after American soldiers left the airfield.

On such claims, Mansoor said that the Taliban members had lit the lights there.

At the same time, TOLOnews quoted Shamshad, a resident of Bagram district, as saying, ‘The lights were turned on again at Bagram Air Force Base.

Some voices were heard at the base. An aircraft has also been seen there.

Unconfirmed reports had rumored the presence of a Chinese Air Force at the base. According to the report of Russia Today, ‘there is a rumor of involvement of a foreign army by pointing fingers at China.’

Earlier in September, analysts said China was eyeing the former US airbase of Bagram in Afghanistan to expand its influence in the region and show the US.

Paul D. Schinkman wrote in US News that China has built friendly relations with the new Taliban government in Afghanistan and is now looking at new ways to increase influence and embarrass the US.

Shinkman said Beijing is considering deploying military personnel and economic development officials to Bagram Airfield, perhaps the most prominent symbol of 20 years of US military presence in Afghanistan.

Blackout crisis deepens in Kabul, Taliban government did not pay electricity bills.

Ahead of the harsh winter season in Afghanistan, a blackout crisis has arisen in the country’s capital Kabul.

People may be forced to remain in the dark as the new Taliban rulers fail to pay dues to Central Asian electricity suppliers.

Dawood Noorzai, who has resigned as chief executive of DABS, has warned that such a situation could lead to a humanitarian disaster, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported.

Noorzai resigned from her post on August 15, nearly two weeks after the Taliban takeover. Noorzai Filhah is in touch with DABS officials regarding this crisis.

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