
UN special rapporteur Richard Bennett will travel to Doha for meetings with Afghanistan representatives and regional officials as part of efforts to address Afghanistan’s worsening human rights situation.
The UN has announced that Richard Bennett, the Human Rights Council’s special rapporteur on Afghanistan, will travel to Doha from December 1 to 4 for meetings with Afghanistan representatives and regional and international partners.
According to a UN statement issued on Sunday, Bennett will hold talks with Qatari officials, Afghanistan civil society members, and diplomats based in Doha to assess the human-rights situation and explore coordinated approaches to supporting Afghanistan civilians.
The UN said Bennett’s mission is aimed at strengthening regional dialogue and using “all available tools” to improve the rights environment in Afghanistan, where restrictions on women, minorities and civil society have sharply escalated since the Taliban takeover.
Bennett’s mandate, which the Human Rights Council extended earlier this year, requires him to report on rights violations and engage governments on policy responses to Afghanistan’s worsening humanitarian and human-rights landscape.
Despite the ongoing international engagement, the Taliban have barred Bennett from entering Afghanistan, accusing him of issuing politically motivated reports. As a result, he continues to meet Afghanistan activists, refugees and diaspora groups outside the country.
Human-rights organisations have urged the UN to intensify diplomatic pressure on the Taliban, warning that rights protections are collapsing and regional coordination remains weak.
Bennett’s consultations in Doha are expected to shape his next formal assessment to the Human Rights Council, outlining recommendations for an international strategy toward Afghanistan in 2025.
Afghanistan Peace Campaign