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Abdul Matin Sarfraz

Abdul Matin Sarfraz

Journalist | Toronto | English
About Abdul Matin Sarfraz

Abdul Matin Sarfraz has contributed to reporting on federal policy thanks to a grant from the Local Journalism Initiative and the Government of Canada.

Abdul Matin Sarfraz was born and raised in Afghanistan. He has personally witnessed his country’s political conflict and had the opportunity to study the inner workings of conflicts as a social phenomenon.

Though he has been directly affected by his country’s decades of conflict, he has not given up. He has continuously struggled to get a higher education in hopes that someday he, his children and all Afghans, will have a better future.

Abdul Matin received a BA in law from the University of Takhar, Afghanistan, and a master’s in journalism from the University of Hong Kong HKU through a scholarship.

Since 2004, he worked as a reporter with national and international media covering the insurgency, human rights, and governance in Afghanistan. In 2004, he co-founded the first weekly independent newspaper (Sada-e-Watan) in Kunduz province after the fall of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

He has worked with international media outlets such as the New York Times, Reuters, Der Spiegel, German Press Agency DPA, Vice.com and local ones such as Pajhwok

News Agency and Radio Sada-e-Azadi Shamal.

He also co-founded and worked as editor-in-chief for Rasany Independent Daily Newspaper in Kunduz Afghanistan.

From March 2023 to March 2024, Matin was a Journalism Fellow at Canada's National Observer through the Afghan Journalists-in-Residence Program in partnership with Journalists for Human Rights with funding from the Meta Journalism Project.

213 Articles

Carney shifts carbon price strategy, pledges to make Canada a clean energy superpower

Climate action is a central pillar of Mark Carney’s campaign for the Liberal leadership and his bid to become the next prime minister, but with a major shift in strategy. Instead of maintaining the current carbon tax system that places the cost on consumers, Carney is proposing a new approach — shifting the financial burden entirely onto big corporations.

Greenbelt scandal returns to haunt Ford ahead of election

Opposition leaders competing with Doug Ford's Progressive Conservative Party have turned their sights back to the Greenbelt scandal, weeks before a provincial election. The renewed attention comes after new allegations laid out in a $2.2-million lawsuit that suggests two former government staffers — Ryan Amato, the “driving force” behind the Greenbelt land swap scandal, and Shiv Raj, a Ford aide — leveraged political connections to secure rezoning approvals in exchange for payments from a developer.

Ford floats stiff retaliation measures against tariff threats while opponents advocate for looser interprovincial trade

As U.S. tariffs threaten Ontario’s economy, Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford raised the possibility of tough retaliatory measures, including banning U.S. companies from provincial contracts, and cancelling a $100-million deal with Elon Musk’s Starlink. Meanwhile, opposition leaders are pushing for stronger interprovincial trade, and a united "Team Canada" approach as a long-term solution.