<p>Hundreds of people braved sub-zero temperatures in Afghanistan's capital to queue outside the passport office early Sunday, a day after the Taliban government announced it would resume issuing travel documents.</p>.<p>Many began their wait the previous night and most stood patiently in single file -- some desperate to leave the country for medical treatment, others to escape the Islamists' renewed rule.</p>.<p>Tense Taliban personnel periodically charged crowds that formed at the front of the queue and at a nearby roadblock.</p>.<p>"We don't want any suicide attack or explosion to happen," said Taliban security operative Ajmal Toofan, 22, expressing concerns about the dangers of crowding.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/islamic-countries-meet-to-discuss-aid-for-afghanistan-1062374.html">Islamic countries meet to discuss aid for Afghanistan</a></strong></p>.<p>The local branch of the Islamic State group, the Taliban's principal enemy, killed more than 150 people in late August when citizens massed at Kabul airport in a desperate bid to leave during the early days of the new regime.</p>.<p>"Our responsibility here is to protect people," Toofan added calmly, his gun pointed professionally towards the ground. "But the people are not cooperating."</p>.<p>He spoke to AFP as one of his colleagues pushed a man who then fell headlong just short of a coil of barbed wire.</p>.<p>Mohammed Osman Akbari, 60, said he was urgently trying to reach Pakistan because dilapidated hospitals at home were unable to complete his heart surgery.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pakistan-hopeful-of-reaching-consensus-on-afghanistan-during-key-oic-meeting-1062256.html">Pakistan hopeful of reaching consensus on Afghanistan during key OIC meeting</a></strong></p>.<p>Medics "put springs in my heart", he said, referring to a stent. "They need to be removed and it's not possible here."</p>.<p>Nearby, ambulances containing people too sick to queue were parked at the side of the road.</p>.<p>"The patient has a heart problem," said ambulance driver Muslim Fakhri, 21, referring to a 43-year-old man lying on a stretcher inside his vehicle.</p>.<p>An applicant has to be present to ensure the passport is issued, he explained.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-govt-resumes-issuing-afghan-passports-in-kabul-1062167.html">Taliban govt resumes issuing Afghan passports in Kabul </a></strong></p>.<p> The Taliban initially stopped issuing passports shortly after their return to power, which came as the previous, Western-backed regime imploded in the final stages of a US military withdrawal.</p>.<p>In October, authorities reopened the passport office in Kabul only to suspend workdays later as a flood of applications caused the biometric equipment to break down.</p>.<p>But the office said Saturday that the issue has been resolved and those whose applications were already in the process can now get their documents.</p>.<p>Mursal Rasooli, 26, said she was happy to hear the news.</p>.<p>"The situation here is not peaceful," she told AFP, hugging her two-year-old daughter Bibi Hawa close for dual relief against the biting cold.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-prepare-new-afghan-budget-without-foreign-aid-1061888.html" target="_blank">Taliban prepare new Afghan budget without foreign aid</a></strong></p>.<p>"If the situation gets worse than this, then we have the passport" and can flee, she said.</p>.<p>Her husband is in Iran because he could not find work here, she added, before expressing concern about skyrocketing prices and a lack of jobs and education for women and girls.</p>.<p>Issuing passports -- and allowing people to leave amid a humanitarian crisis the UN has called an "avalanche of hunger" -- is seen as a test of the Taliban's commitment to the international community.</p>.<p>The Taliban are meanwhile pressing donors to restore billions of dollars in aid that was suspended when they came to power.</p>.<p>Local musician Omid Naseer, sporting a leather jacket, short beard and unkempt hair, was desperate to leave.</p>.<p>For "months now, since the Taliban came (to power), we've had no work", he said.</p>.<p>"The artists are most vulnerable, but no one cares."</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>
<p>Hundreds of people braved sub-zero temperatures in Afghanistan's capital to queue outside the passport office early Sunday, a day after the Taliban government announced it would resume issuing travel documents.</p>.<p>Many began their wait the previous night and most stood patiently in single file -- some desperate to leave the country for medical treatment, others to escape the Islamists' renewed rule.</p>.<p>Tense Taliban personnel periodically charged crowds that formed at the front of the queue and at a nearby roadblock.</p>.<p>"We don't want any suicide attack or explosion to happen," said Taliban security operative Ajmal Toofan, 22, expressing concerns about the dangers of crowding.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/islamic-countries-meet-to-discuss-aid-for-afghanistan-1062374.html">Islamic countries meet to discuss aid for Afghanistan</a></strong></p>.<p>The local branch of the Islamic State group, the Taliban's principal enemy, killed more than 150 people in late August when citizens massed at Kabul airport in a desperate bid to leave during the early days of the new regime.</p>.<p>"Our responsibility here is to protect people," Toofan added calmly, his gun pointed professionally towards the ground. "But the people are not cooperating."</p>.<p>He spoke to AFP as one of his colleagues pushed a man who then fell headlong just short of a coil of barbed wire.</p>.<p>Mohammed Osman Akbari, 60, said he was urgently trying to reach Pakistan because dilapidated hospitals at home were unable to complete his heart surgery.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pakistan-hopeful-of-reaching-consensus-on-afghanistan-during-key-oic-meeting-1062256.html">Pakistan hopeful of reaching consensus on Afghanistan during key OIC meeting</a></strong></p>.<p>Medics "put springs in my heart", he said, referring to a stent. "They need to be removed and it's not possible here."</p>.<p>Nearby, ambulances containing people too sick to queue were parked at the side of the road.</p>.<p>"The patient has a heart problem," said ambulance driver Muslim Fakhri, 21, referring to a 43-year-old man lying on a stretcher inside his vehicle.</p>.<p>An applicant has to be present to ensure the passport is issued, he explained.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-govt-resumes-issuing-afghan-passports-in-kabul-1062167.html">Taliban govt resumes issuing Afghan passports in Kabul </a></strong></p>.<p> The Taliban initially stopped issuing passports shortly after their return to power, which came as the previous, Western-backed regime imploded in the final stages of a US military withdrawal.</p>.<p>In October, authorities reopened the passport office in Kabul only to suspend workdays later as a flood of applications caused the biometric equipment to break down.</p>.<p>But the office said Saturday that the issue has been resolved and those whose applications were already in the process can now get their documents.</p>.<p>Mursal Rasooli, 26, said she was happy to hear the news.</p>.<p>"The situation here is not peaceful," she told AFP, hugging her two-year-old daughter Bibi Hawa close for dual relief against the biting cold.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-prepare-new-afghan-budget-without-foreign-aid-1061888.html" target="_blank">Taliban prepare new Afghan budget without foreign aid</a></strong></p>.<p>"If the situation gets worse than this, then we have the passport" and can flee, she said.</p>.<p>Her husband is in Iran because he could not find work here, she added, before expressing concern about skyrocketing prices and a lack of jobs and education for women and girls.</p>.<p>Issuing passports -- and allowing people to leave amid a humanitarian crisis the UN has called an "avalanche of hunger" -- is seen as a test of the Taliban's commitment to the international community.</p>.<p>The Taliban are meanwhile pressing donors to restore billions of dollars in aid that was suspended when they came to power.</p>.<p>Local musician Omid Naseer, sporting a leather jacket, short beard and unkempt hair, was desperate to leave.</p>.<p>For "months now, since the Taliban came (to power), we've had no work", he said.</p>.<p>"The artists are most vulnerable, but no one cares."</p>.<p><strong>Watch the latest DH Videos here:</strong></p>