Coordinated, Integrated Strategies for Afghanistan’s Challenges

According to Fitrat, currently, the Islamic Emirate has good relations and positive interactions with most countries.

Tariq Ali Bakhit, the Special Representative of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) for Afghanistan, has called creating a strategic and coherent solution to solve Afghanistan’s challenges.

Bakhit said at the third Doha meeting that achieving this goal requires engaging continuously and constructively with the existing authorities in the country.

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation said that the organization is continuing its discussions with officials of the Islamic Emirate regarding women’s rights to education and work.

A statement of this organization said there is an “urgent need to adopt a coordinated and integrated strategic approach to deal with the many challenges facing Afghanistan and its people, stressing that the way to achieve this goal is to engage continuously and constructively with the existing authorities in the country.”

Hamdullah Fitrat, the Deputy Spokesperson for the Islamic Emirate, says that if countries want to solve their challenges with Afghanistan, they should interact with the interim government.

According to Fitrat, currently, the Islamic Emirate has good relations and positive interactions with most countries.

The Deputy Spokesperson of the Islamic Emirate said: “If the countries of the world want to solve their challenges with Afghanistan, they should come forward to interact with the Islamic Emirate, and in this field, most countries understand this fact and interact with the Islamic Emirate at a high level.”

Several political experts said that the Islamic Emirate should take a series of actions for greater interaction and recognition by the international community.

“It is better to interact with Afghanistan, and this interaction does not mean that it is only with the government, but interaction will make it easier for the government and the people of Afghanistan,” said Sayed Akbar Agha, a political analyst.

Nasser Shafiq, another political analyst, said: “Our foreign policy must be neutral and maintain the balance of the interests of the countries of the region and the world, and in domestic politics, we must ensure the creation of national unity for both the region and the international community by maintaining diversity.”

Earlier, the Islamic Emirate said that the caretaker government has embassies and representative offices in about 38 countries, and more countries and organizations have opened their embassies and representative offices in Afghanistan.

Coordinated, Integrated Strategies for Afghanistan’s Challenges