Taliban talks in Norway flash new discussion about acknowledgment

Taliban talks in Norway flash new discussion about acknowledgment

Taliban talks in Norway flash new discussion about acknowledgment

Taliban talks in Norway spark new recognition debate This is the first time since the Taliban took power in August that their representatives have held formal meetings in Europe. Taliban Prime Minister Mohammad Hasan Akhund speaks during an economic conference at the former presidential palace in Kabul, Afg

hanistan, Wednesday, January 19, 2022. OSLO, Norway – A Taliban delegation led by the acting foreign minister Amir Khan Muttaqi started on Sunday 3 days.

of talks in Oslo with Western officials and representatives of Afghan civil society in the context of the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Afghanistan. closed-door meetings have taken place at a hotel in the snowy mountains above the Norwegian capital and it is the first time since the Taliban took power in August that their representatives have held official meetings in Europe.

The talks were not without controversy, however, reigniting  debate over the legitimacy of the Taliban government, especially as they were being held in Northway, a NATO country involved in Afghanistan since 2001 until the Taliban conquest. last summer. At the end of the first day of talks, Taliban delegate Shafiullah Azam told The Associated Press that the meetings with Western officials were “a step towards legitimizing (the) Afghan government”, adding that “this kind of invitation and communication will help”.

(the) European community, (the) U. or many other countries to erase the bad image of the Afghan government. Such a statement could annoy the  Norwegian guests of the Taliban.Earlier, Norwegian Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt stressed that the talks “were not a legitimization or recognition of the Taliban”. On Sunday, 200 protesters gathered in a frozen square outside the Norwegian Foreign Ministry in Oslo to denounce meetings with the Taliban, which has not received diplomatic recognition from any foreign government.

“The Taliban have not changed as some members of the international community like to say,” said Ahman Yasir, a Norwegian Afghan who has lived in Norway for almost two decades. “They are as brutal as it was in 2001 and before. Taliban leaders met with women’s rights and human rights activists on Sunday, but there was no official word on those talks.

As of Monday, Taliban representatives will meet  delegations from Western nations and will be certain to insist that nearly $10 billion frozen by the United States and other Western countries be released as Afghanistan faces a precarious humanitarian situation .or unlock Afghan assets and not punish ordinary Afghans for their political speech,” Shafiullah Azam said.

“Because of the hunger, because of the deadly winter, I think it’s time for the international community to support the Afghans, not to punish them because of their political controversies.The United Nations  managed to provide cash and enabled the Taliban administration to pay for imports, including food. electricity. But the U.warned that as many as one million Afghan children were at risk of starvation and that most of the country’s 38 million people lived below the poverty line.

In the face of the Taliban’s call for reservations, Western powers risk placing the privileges of women and young women in Afghanistan at the top of their agenda, along with the West’s repetitive interest in organizing the Taliban  to empower the ethnic minorities and the rigorous meetings of Afghanistan. . releasing control in mid-August, the Taliban imposed far-reaching limits, many of which were coordinated with the women.

Women were barred from many positions outside of welfare and education, their admission to school was restricted beyond sixth grade, and they were willing to wear the hijab. The Taliban, however, eschewed the monumental  burqa, which was necessary when they most recently ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s. us beating the TV groups that cover the shows.

Nomination U., led by Specia’s representative for Afghanistan, Tom West, intends to examine “the development of a delegated policy framework; reactions to useful and critical  financial emergencies; security and counter-terrorism issues; and common liberties, especially the education of young women and women,” according to a statement released by the US State Department. The Scandinavian nation, home to the Nobel Peace Prize, is no longer interesting to touch.

It turns out that has engaged in harmony efforts in various countries, including Mozambique, Afghanistan, Venezuela, Colombia, the Philippines, Israel and the Palestinian Territories, Syria, Myanmar, Somalia, Sri Lanka and South Sudan.

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