UN denies Taliban claim of Banking restrictions removal

Khaama News

 

In the third session of the Doha talks, the United Nations Secretary-General rebutted claims by a Taliban spokesperson regarding the lifting of certain banking restrictions imposed on the group.

Rosemary DiCarlo, UN Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, informed Afghan media that the issue had been discussed, but no decision had been reached during the Doha meeting.

She clarified that sanctions removal does not fall under the UN’s mandate but is a decision for individual countries. Meanwhile, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stated on Al Jazeera that commitments were made at the Doha meeting to ease economic and banking restrictions.

DiCarlo emphasized that the UN only discussed sanctions and that the Taliban expressed concerns about their impact on the private sector and drug-related issues.

Regarding women’s rights, the Taliban refrains from discussing topics such as women’s right to education, work, and political participation, stating these are internal matters and part of Afghanistan’s culture. DiCarlo countered by affirming that Afghanistan has signed international conventions over the years and must adhere to them.

DiCarlo also addressed the invitation of women to future talks, clarifying that it is not within her authority to make decisions. She urged the Taliban to work beyond drug trafficking issues and to promote women’s and girls’ participation and ethnic group equality.

DiCarlo avoided commenting on “gender apartheid” at the Doha talks, stating it’s a legal issue not discussed there. Instead, she emphasized concerns like girls’ education, Afghanistan’s diversity, and the necessity for inclusive governance.

During the Doha meetings, discussions also covered drug production and alternative cultivation methods. The UN representative acknowledged the Taliban’s efforts against drug trafficking but highlighted challenges in implementing substitutes and treating addiction effectively.

UN denies Taliban claim of Banking restrictions removal
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Former Afghan interior minister calls for UN to remove Otunbayeva and cleanse UNAMA

Khaama Press
The former Afghan Interior Minister described the Doha summit as “another example of the UN’s failure in managing the Taliban and Afghanistan.”

Mohammad Omar Daudzai called on the UN Secretary-General to replace Roze Otunbayeva and cleanse UNAMA, stating that the Doha meeting was a waste of time and a deviation from its main purpose.

Daudzai, on Monday, Jule 1st, wrote on his social media platform X that the Doha meeting was a waste of time and a deviation from the main path.

He said; “It is time for the UN Secretary-General to introduce a new representative instead of Otunbayeva [UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative in Afghanistan] and cleanse UNAMA.”

Mr. Daudzai did not provide further explanation for the reasons for proposing Otunbayeva’s dismissal.

Several women and civil society activists had accused Roze Otunbayeva of “whitewashing” her record through a public statement.

The exclusion of women and civil society representatives from the Doha meeting underscores a significant setback for human rights advocacy in Afghanistan. The absence of these voices diminishes the chances of inclusive governance and sustainable peace in the region.

International concern over the Taliban’s stance against women’s rights and the broader implications for human rights in Afghanistan remains palpable. The international community monitors developments closely, emphasizing the need for inclusive dialogue that respects fundamental freedoms and promotes gender equality.

The head of UNAMA justified the Taliban’s opposition to the presence of women and civil society representatives and the inclusion of women’s rights in the Doha summit agenda.

The UN Secretary-General’s representative for Afghanistan said that this group has come from the mountains and war and should not be expected to think like others.

Diplomatic sources previously claimed that the United States and several other countries believe Otunbayeva’s positions on Afghanistan and the Taliban are close to Russia.

Former Afghan interior minister calls for UN to remove Otunbayeva and cleanse UNAMA
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Pakistan to start second phase of Afghan deportations

Al Jazeera

30 June 2024

More than 800,000 Afghans are likely to be expelled in the second phase of the controversial plan.

Pakistan is set to start the second phase of a controversial plan to send undocumented Afghan refugees back to their country.

Beginning Sunday, authorities are likely to expel more than 800,000 Afghans from the country, after about 541,000 were forced to leave in the first phase in November last year.

If they do not leave voluntarily, the refugees face arrest and deportation.

Before the first phase of repatriation, the Pakistani government claimed there were nearly 4.4 million Afghan refugees, out of which an estimated 1.73 million were undocumented.

The government has defended the crackdown, citing security concerns and a struggling economy.

The deportation order came amid a dramatic increase in armed attacks across Pakistan, with the government attributing the attacks to groups and nationals based in Afghanistan, an allegation the Taliban government in Afghanistan rejected.

Philippa Candler, the representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Islamabad, told Al Jazeera that Pakistan should look at the profiles of the undocumented Afghans before expelling them, as many of them were “in need of international protection”.

“They’re refugees. They’re not involved in terrorist activities. They’re just people who fled and who need protection,” said Candler, adding that if any Afghan nationals were involved in terrorist activities, “it should be dealt with separately”.

Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder, reporting from the Khazana refugee camp in Peshawar city that hosts about 1,300 Afghan families, said the refugees have pleaded with the international community and the Pakistani government to give them more time “so that they could leave in a dignified manner”.

“They complain that their houses are being raided in the dead of the night. They’ve been forced to leave this country in a very miserable condition,” Hyder said, adding that it was “very difficult to leave after spending a lifetime in a country and then being forced out”.

Pakistan is not a signatory to the 1951 UN convention that protects the rights of the refugees. The country also lacks domestic laws to protect the refugees as well as procedures to determine the status of individuals seeking international protection within its borders.

Rights group Amnesty International has warned of the risk of persecution for the refugees returning to Afghanistan.

Pakistan to start second phase of Afghan deportations
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A year ago, she drank battery acid to escape life under the Taliban. Today, she has a message for other Afghan girls

By  and 

CNN

Karachi, PakistanCNN — 

Holding a mirror steady in one hand, Arzo carefully applies pencil to her brows as she gets ready for an English lesson a short walk from her home on the outskirts of Pakistani megacity Karachi.

Every step toward the classroom takes her closer to a future she no longer thought possible almost a year ago when she walked downstairs at her family’s home in Afghanistan and tried to take her own life.

“On that day, I felt like everything was over. I was overwhelmed by hopelessness, and that’s why I drank acid, convinced it would end my life,” said Arzo, whom CNN first met last November as she lay in bed, too weak to speak.

At the time, she was 15 years old but weighed as much as a 4-year-old, her limbs painfully thin after months of starvation despite her siblings’ best efforts to feed her through a tube inserted in her stomach.

Now, after an extraordinary intervention, Arzo is making a remarkable recovery – but she faces a new threat that could force her family to return to Afghanistan, and a life under Taliban rule that has become so intolerable for women and girls that some would rather die.

Before life-saving treatment, Arzo was wasting away. Now she’s studying with hope for the future. CNN

Pakistan, a place of refuge for millions of Afghans, is carrying out a mass deportation program that has already seen more than 600,000 people cross the border since September 15 – with the threat that more could follow in July, when another class of visas expires.

What awaits them is a system of gender apartheid – violations against women and girls so “severe and extensive” that a senior United Nations official says they may amount to crimes against humanity.

It was what drove Arzo to try to take her own life.

For months, Arzo’s siblings fed her fluid through a tube direct to her stomach but it wasn’t enough.

“The gravity and scale of the crimes cannot be overstated,” Richard Bennett, the UN’s Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan, told a Human Rights Council meeting on June 18, as he presented his damning report on the Taliban’s rule.

“We have a collective responsibility to challenge and dismantle this appalling system and to hold those responsible to account,” he said.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid rejected the report as an attempt to “tarnish perceptions” of Afghanistan before a rare meeting this weekend between UN member states and Taliban officials in Doha, Qatar.

Despite strong condemnation of the Taliban by most UN member states, the issue of women’s rights will not be on the formal agenda.

Instead, talks with Taliban officials will focus on counternarcotics and the private sector.

Afghan women and other civil society members weren’t invited to the meeting – they’ll meet separately with member states, without the Taliban, the next day, according to a UN official.

Rights groups are furious the Taliban meeting is going ahead without Afghan women, and say it legitimizes Afghanistan’s leaders and fails to hold them to account for grave injustices.

Smuggled across the border

Arzo is not her real name. She and her older brother and sister, Ahamad and Mahsa, are using aliases to protect their family members in Afghanistan from reprisals from the Taliban, who have sought to silence critics of their repressive rule.

They’re also hiding from Pakistani authorities, who have threatened to arrest and deport undocumented foreigners, making every trip outside their rented room fraught with risk.

After Arzo drank the acid in Afghanistan last July, a doctor told her family she’d likely die if treated there, so they smuggled her across the border to Pakistan, where another doctor inserted a feeding tube into her stomach.

For most of that time, Arzo has been confined to bed, unable to eat, after the acid created a stricture – or a blockage – in her esophagus.

Every three hours, including through the night, Ahamad and Mahsa said they fed their little sister fluids – nutritional milk powder and juice – through the tube direct to her stomach.

But it wasn’t enough, and by November, Arzo weighed just 25 kilograms, or 55 pounds.

By then, most of their money was gone, too, on rent and private medical bills.

“We are financially broken here. Whatever we had, we spent it,” Arzo’s brother Ahamad, a 27-year-old journalist under threat from the Taliban due to his occupation, told CNN in November.

“I don’t cry in front of her, but I kiss her and cry while she sleeps at night, for her future, for her treatment, so she can survive this sickness,” he said.

In November, Arzo needed help walking across the room where she lives in Pakistan. CNN

A lifesaving intervention

Within hours of Arzo’s story airing on CNN last December, an email arrived with the offer of help.

A non-profit organization volunteered medical care on the condition that its name wouldn’t be published due to potential repercussions in Pakistan for aiding an Afghan who is residing in the country illegally.

“She was 20 to 22kg at the time that we saw her,” said the doctor who treated Arzo, whom CNN has also agreed not to name.

“She had come to us on a wheelchair and was bedridden at that point. She was essentially one influenza, or cold, or other kind of infection away from essentially dying,” he said.

Doctors told her siblings to increase her caloric intake threefold, so she’d be strong enough for her first medical procedure – an endoscopic examination that revealed severe damage to her esophagus, so that it had almost closed, making it impossible to eat.

Using X-ray guidance, the doctors passed a wire through a gap the size of a pinhole and inflated a tiny balloon to slowly widen the passage.

“Over the course of two months or so, with multiple staged procedures, we were able to open it up to the point where she was able to eat by mouth, which itself was a game changer,” the doctor told CNN.

Arzo’s brother Ahamad sent CNN regular WhatsApp messages.

JANUARY 13, 2024

She is worried. She cannot eat, she wants food very much.

JANUARY 16, 2024

My sister has gained five kilos again. Now her weight is 33 kilos. My sister is fine, but when the doctor said that she might need an operation in the end, tears flowed from her eyes.

JANUARY 23, 2024

Today, they inserted a balloon into my sister’s throat, next week they will insert a balloon again. She is fine but her throat is a little sore.

JANUARY 24, 2024

My sister can eat through her mouth for the first time. The doctor said to cook rice with milk well and give it to her. Today she was very happy.

‘These lives are not worth anything’

During an interview this month, Arzo sat upright on the bed, straightened her head scarf and spoke for the first time about why she tried to take her own life.

It was July 2023, and she was sitting on the second floor of her family’s two-story home, in a remote Afghan province, eating what would be her last meal for months.

“As I ate food at home, I glanced at pictures of my classmates and felt a deep sense of longing for them,” she said.

Arzo told CNN what drove her suicide attempt.

Arzo hadn’t seen her classmates since the Taliban banned girls from secondary education after seizing power in August 2021, and rarely messaged them because the internet connection was cut to her family’s village.

So, in a moment of grief for the friends and the life that she loved, she walked downstairs to the battery her family used to power their home and drank its contents. Her sister Mahsa found her and forced her fingers down her throat to make her vomit.

“When I asked her why she had done such a thing, her response was heartbreaking,” said Mahsa. Arzo had told her: “These lives are not worth anything,” she said.

At the time, Arzo was just 15.

Mahsa also lost everything with the Taliban takeover. She was 22 and had graduated from high school before the Taliban banned girls from getting an education beyond elementary school. She held ambitions to become a dress designer or to work in a beauty salon, but those career paths were soon shut down.

“When I went to Kabul, I enrolled in a tailoring program. However, for three months, I lived in constant fear as the Taliban would visit our workshop daily and criticize us for not wearing the hijab. They eventually forced us to shut down the workshop,” she said.

The Taliban ordered beauty salons to close in July 2023.

Instead of working, Mahsa found herself in Pakistan caring for Arzo, who was in constant pain with no medication to ease her suffering.

“When she was asleep, it provided a brief respite from the distress, but the moments when she was awake during our meals were particularly challenging for us to endure,” Mahsa said.

Arzo’s treatment has allowed them both to think about their future, and for the first time in years, they’ve glimpsed the possibility of a better life.

“When hope is lacking and life seems directionless, unexpected events can present themselves,” Mahsa said.

Arzo is determined to put the past behind her and has urged other girls in Afghanistan not to follow her lead.

“My message to all girls in Afghanistan who can’t continue their education or go to school is to stay strong and don’t lose hope.”

No safe haven in Pakistan

While the Taliban is in power, Arzo does not want to go back to Afghanistan, but she and her siblings are not wanted in Pakistan.

Last October, Islamabad gave around 1 million undocumented Afghan migrants one month to leave the country or face arrest and deportation. More than 600,000 people fled – most voluntarily, though 89% said they did so for fear of arrest, according to UN data. Of the total, more than 30,000 people were arrested and deported.

On the outskirts of Karachi, residents in one Afghan community thought they were safe from the deportation drive. Security officials came to their area late last year and painted red numbers on their homes to show how many people lived there and their visa status.

“At the beginning, the local people were happy over the markings because … it would certify that only registered Afghan refugees were living in a specific premises,” said lawyer Moniza Kakar, who showed CNN the markings.

Some houses were marked with “ACC” (Afghan Citizen Card), others with “POR” (Proof of Registration) – both forms of identification issued to Afghans long before the Taliban’s return.

But then in April, the government added around 800,000 ACC holders to its removal list. And the expiry date for POR cards was set to June 30, putting another 1.35 million people at risk of deportation.

Rain had already washed away some of the red paint, then residents tried to scrub it off to avoid encounters with police, said Kakar, managing partner at Abbas and Kakar Law Offices, who helps community members navigate Pakistan’s immigration system.

“They feel fear and uncertainty about what should happen to them,” she said.

Pakistan’s policy on “illegal foreigners” is no different to that of other nations, Pakistani Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch told CNN.

“Individuals who are here illegally have to be dealt with according to Pakistani laws, and that includes fines, imprisonment and deportation,” she said.

Baloch told CNN on Friday that the government still hadn’t decided whether to extend POR visas that were set to expire on Sunday, and had earlier said that Pakistan was considering the implications of “all the various options.”

Many of those at risk of deportation know little of Afghanistan.

Amanullah was just a boy when his family sought refuge in Pakistan during the former Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s, an event that ultimately plunged the country into four decades of near constant conflict. Now he’s firmly settled in the Afghan community in Karachi with seven children of his own, and two grandchildren.

“We have nothing left in Afghanistan anymore,” Amanullah told CNN. “My children have grown up here and know little about their homeland.”

A member of the Mughal tribe, Amanullah sells watermelon at a fruit stall, but he said some other residents had closed their businesses for fear of being deported with no notice.

Pakistan has sheltered Afghan migrants for decades but now, amidst a surge in militant attacks on its territory, government officials say they present a security risk.

The Taliban has denied any involvement, and relations between the two countries are worsening as they trade accusations – and in some cases retaliatory strikes.

‘Our room is like a prison’

In March, as Arzo began to regain strength, her brother Ahamad’s messages turned to the threat of deportation and what that could mean for their family.

There are ways out of Pakistan for people like Arzo, Ahamad and Mahsa, but they typically involve taking risky journeys across borders, or joining lengthy waiting lists to be relocated to a third country that agrees to receive them.

Afghans without visas can’t legally work in Pakistan, and many who fled Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover have already run out of money.

Arzo and her siblings survive on handouts from a small number of supporters outside Pakistan, who are trying to raise enough money to sponsor them to move to Canada.

“I really thank all the doctors from the bottom my heart,” she said.

“My message to my friends is to be patient. One day, the Taliban will leave Afghanistan, and we will be able to pursue our goals.”

But until then, women and girls live in a suffocating silence, where the Taliban have issued at least 52 new edicts since last June, tightening their control over the female population, according to the UN report.

“It should shock all of us that that there’s a country on this planet that denies girls access to education beyond sixth grade, that denies women access to most paid employment,” said Heather Barr, associate women’s rights director at Human Rights Watch.

“Women can’t go to a park. They can’t walk in the sunshine; they can’t exercise; they can’t play sport,” she said. “You know, all of these things that make you feel human.”

Barr is scathing of the UN process and says it’s clear that engaging with the Taliban has not worked.

“Diplomatic engagement in terms of getting the Taliban to respect women’s rights has been a 100% failure,” she said. “It’s achieved nothing. And so, it’s time now for us to be talking about other strategies.”

She said countries could bring a case against the Taliban in the International Court of Justice (ICJ), much like South Africa’s allegations of genocide against Israel over its military actions in Gaza, or Taliban leaders could be charged with gender persecution in the International Criminal Court (ICC).

“It (also) means diplomats and countries listening to the Afghan women’s rights defenders, who are calling for the crime of gender apartheid to be recognized under international law,” Barr added.

In his report, UN special rapporteur Bennett also backed calls for gender apartheid to be a punishable offense and predicted a dystopic future for women and girls should the world fail to act.

“Left unchecked, the Taliban’s institutionalized system of gender oppression will become more robust, as those resisting it suffer increasing violence, as memories of female role models and notions of female independence fade, and as new generations are raised and radicalized in a society unquestioning of its dehumanization and exploitation of women and girls,” he wrote.

Arzo doesn’t want a life like that for herself, her sister, or the women and girls still in Afghanistan.

She’s learning English, hopeful that one day soon she’ll be able to leave Pakistan for a safe country.

“I don’t know what the future holds, but as long as I am in Pakistan, I will continue my lessons,” she said.

“I’m determined to achieve my goals … Now I am not scared of anything.”

 

 

A year ago, she drank battery acid to escape life under the Taliban. Today, she has a message for other Afghan girls
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UN-led meeting in Qatar with Afghan Taliban is not a recognition of their government, official says

BY  RAHIM FAIEZ
Associates Press

ISLAMABAD (AP) — A United Nations-led meeting held in Qatar with the Taliban on increasing engagement with Afghanistan does not translate into a recognition of their government, a U.N. official said Monday.

The gathering on Sunday and Monday in Qatar’s capital of Doha with envoys from some two dozen countries was the first time that representatives of the Afghan Taliban administration attended such a U.N.-sponsored meeting.

The Taliban were not invited to the first meeting, and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said they set unacceptable conditions for attending the second one, in February, including demands that Afghan civil society members be excluded from the talks and that the Taliban be treated as the country’s legitimate rulers.

Ahead of Doha, representatives of Afghan women were excluded from attending, paving the way for the Taliban to send their envoys — though the organizers insisted that demands for women’s rights would be raised.

“I would like to emphasize that this meeting and this process of engagement does not mean normalization or recognition,” Rosemary A. DiCarlo, a U.N. official for political and peacebuilding affairs said Monday.

“My hope is that the constructive exchanges on the various issues over the last two days have moved us a little closer to resolving some of the problems that are having such a devastating impact on the Afghan people,” she added.

Zabihullah Mujahid, chief Taliban government spokesman who headed the delegation to Doha, said there was opportunity for them to meet with representatives of various countries on the sidelines of the gathering.

He added that the messages from the Taliban “reached all participating” countries at the meeting. Afghanistan needs cooperation with the private sector and in the fight against drugs, he also said. “Most countries expressed their willingness to cooperate in these areas.”

The Taliban seized power in August 2021 as United States and NATO forces were in the final weeks of their pullout from Afghanistan following two decades of war. No country officially recognizes the Taliban and the U.N. has said that recognition remains practically impossible while bans on female education and employment remain in place.

However, some participants, including Canada, expressed disappointment over the exclusion of women and civil society representatives.

“Canada is extremely disappointed that the U.N. organizers have excluded non-Taliban Afghan participants, including women’s advocates, religious and ethnic minorities, and human rights groups from participating in the meeting’s main sessions,” David Sproule, Canada’s special representative for Afghanistan, said in a statement.

DiCarlo, the U.N. official, said that “while women and civil society were not sitting across the table form the de facto (Taliban) authorities in last two days, we made their voices heard … civil society has a rightful role to play in shaping Afghanistan’s future.”

 

UN-led meeting in Qatar with Afghan Taliban is not a recognition of their government, official says
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Taliban Talks With U.N. Go On Despite Alarm Over Exclusion of Women

Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan

The New York Times

The meeting is the first between the Taliban and a United Nations-led conference of global envoys who are seeking to engage the Afghan government on critical issues.

Taliban officials attended a rare, United Nations-led conference of global envoys to Afghanistan on Sunday, the first such meeting Taliban representatives have agreed to engage in, after organizers said Afghan women would be excluded from the talks.

The two-day conference in Doha, Qatar, is the third of its kind. It is part of a United Nations-led effort, known as the “Doha process,” started in May 2023. It is meant to develop a unified approach for international engagement with Afghanistan. Envoys from around 25 countries and regional organizations, including the European Union, the United States, Russia and China, are attending.

Taliban officials were not invited to the first meeting and refused to attend the second meeting, held in February, after objecting to the inclusion of Afghan civil society groups that attended.

The conference has drawn a fierce backlash in recent days after U.N. officials announced that Afghan women would not participate in discussions with Taliban officials. Human rights groups and Afghan women’s groups have slammed the decision to exclude them as too severe a concession by the U.N. to persuade the Taliban to engage in the talks.

The decision to exclude women sets “a deeply damaging precedent” and risks “legitimatizing their gender-based institutional system of oppression,” Agnès Callamard, the secretary general of Amnesty International, said in a statement referring to the Taliban’s policies toward women. “The international community must adopt a clear and united stance: The rights of women and girls in Afghanistan are nonnegotiable.”

Since seizing power from the U.S.-backed government in 2021, Taliban authorities have systematically rolled back women’s rights, effectively erasing women from public life. Women and girls are barred from getting education beyond primary school and banned from most employment outside of education and health care, and they cannot travel significant distances without a male guardian.

Human rights monitors have described the government’s policies as akin to “gender apartheid” and suggested that the systematic oppression of women and girls could amount to crimes against humanity.

U.N. officials defended their decision to exclude Afghan women in the talks this week, insisting that the issue of women’s rights will be brought up in discussions with the Taliban. They also said that they will meet Afghan civil society representatives before and after the talks with Taliban officials.

“The issue of inclusive governance, women’s rights, human rights writ large, will be a part of every single session,” Rosemary DiCarlo, the U.N. political chief who is chairing the meeting, said in a news conference on Thursday.

Many Afghan women also called on Afghan activists invited to attend the side talks in Doha to boycott the discussions in protest.

The meeting represents an effort by the international community “to normalize the Taliban,” Rokhshana Rezai, an Afghan woman activist, posted on X. “I ask all those who believe in freedom and humanity to boycott this meeting, because this meeting is neither for the benefit of the Afghan people nor for the benefit of Afghan women.”

The controversy around the conference underscores the heated tensions within the West over how to deal with Afghanistan’s new government.

Some groups have pushed to isolate the Taliban by using sticks, like sanctions, over carrots to persuade them to change their most controversial policies toward women. Others have sought to engage the new government, in the hope that fostering more dialogue would bring policy changes within Afghanistan to make the government more palatable to the West.

Officials who are seeking to engage the Taliban want to focus on critical issues like counterterrorism, given the presence of terrorist groups, including the Islamic State affiliate in the region, on Afghan soil. They also say that without greater dialogue, Afghanistan could become more closely allied with Russia and China, both of which have been willing to overlook the Taliban’s human rights record in engaging with their government.

U.N. officials emphasized last week that the conference with Taliban officials did not represent a step toward formally recognizing the group as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan. To date, no country has done so.

The chief spokesman for the Taliban, Zabihullah Mujahid, who is leading the delegation, said in a news conference on Saturday that his government hopes to discuss economic issues and international sanctions affecting Afghanistan.

The Taliban authorities “acknowledge the issues about women,” he said. “But these issues are Afghanistan’s issues,” he added, suggesting that the Afghan government did not believe the international community should be involved in setting its domestic policy regarding women’s rights.

Najim Rahim contributed reporting from San Francisco.

Taliban Talks With U.N. Go On Despite Alarm Over Exclusion of Women
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US and Qatar officials meet at Doha summit to support women in Afghanistan

Khaama Press

Rina Amiri, U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan’s Women, met with Lulwa Al-Khater, Qatar’s Minister of State for International Cooperation, on the sidelines of the third Doha summit to discuss support for women and girls in Afghanistan.

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated on Monday, July 1st, that the meeting emphasized the importance of economic stability and support for initiatives empowering women in Afghanistan.

The U.S. Special Representative for Afghan Women continues to express gratitude to Qatar for hosting the third Doha summit.

Ms. Amiri highlighted discussions at the Doha summit concerning the human rights situation of women and civil society in Afghanistan, as advocated by the United Nations.

She also previously mentioned meeting with Thomas West, the U.S. Special Representative for Afghanistan, emphasizing, “We will continue extensive negotiations during and after the third Doha summit to support a comprehensive framework for women and civil society. Ultimately, Afghanistan’s peace, security, and stability challenges cannot be resolved without their inclusion.”

The absence of women at the third Doha summit has also sparked reactions.

International stakeholders are urging inclusive dialogues prioritising Afghan women’s rights and participation in all aspects of the country’s reconstruction.

The outcomes of the third Doha summit will be pivotal in shaping international support for Afghanistan’s development, with a particular focus on gender equality and human rights.

Moving forward, continued engagement and advocacy are crucial to ensuring that Afghan women are integral to the peace and stability of their nation.

US and Qatar officials meet at Doha summit to support women in Afghanistan
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Canada’s Intl Affairs Agency Concerned With Absence of Women at Doha 3

Tolo News

1 July 2024

Some women’s rights activists in Afghanistan also believe that the presence of women representatives at the third Doha meeting was crucial.

Canada’s International Affairs Agency stated in a press release that it is disappointed with the absence of Afghan civil society and women’s representatives at the third Doha meeting on Afghanistan.

The agency highlighted the absence of a Canadian representative at the third Doha meeting and reiterated that Canada has always emphasized the necessity of comprehensive participation in such meetings.

“The full, equal and meaningful participation of Afghan women in the Doha meeting process is not only a core tenet of the Women, Peace and Security agenda, but fundamental to the achievement of a peaceful, stable and inclusive Afghanistan. None of the goals that Afghans are seeking to achieve are possible without the full participation of women,” the statement reads.

Some women’s rights activists in Afghanistan also believe that the presence of women representatives at the third Doha meeting was crucial.

“When decisions are made about women, their representatives should be present. It is an urgent need. The absence is regrettable,” said Alam Tab Amiri, a women’s rights activist.

“Today, the doors of schools and universities are closed, and restrictions on women are increasing daily. It would have been better if women had participated,” said Tafseer Siyahpoosh, another women’s rights activist.

However, Zabihullah Mujahid, head of the Islamic Emirate delegation at the third Doha meeting, stated that the issue of women in Afghanistan is an internal issue and efforts are ongoing to address the challenges in this regard.

“Internal issues should be left to Afghanistan. We understand our problems and the demands of our people, and we are trying to find solutions. However, countries should establish positive interactions with Afghanistan as a nation, which benefits all people. If, God forbid, restrictions continue, the first ones to suffer will be the people and women,” said Mujahid.

This comes as the G7 countries, representatives of various countries for Afghanistan, and women’s rights advocates have previously expressed concern about the absence of civil society and women’s representatives at the third Doha meeting on Afghanistan.

Canada’s Intl Affairs Agency Concerned With Absence of Women at Doha 3
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Around 115,000 Afghan Migrants Return from Pakistan, Iran

Haqqani added that cash and food supplies have been distributed to the returnees.

The Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation reported the return of approximately 115,000 migrants from Pakistan and Iran in the past month.

Abdul Mutalib Haqqani, spokesperson of the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation, told TOLOnews that 98,000 of these migrants were returned from Iran.

Haqqani added that cash and food supplies have been distributed to the returnees.

The spokesperson for the Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation said: “In the past month, nearly 115,000 Afghan citizens have returned from Pakistan and Iran, some forcibly and some voluntarily.”

At the same time, a number of Afghan migrants in Pakistan and Iran told TOLOnews that living conditions for migrants in these countries are becoming increasingly difficult.

“Afghan migrants who come to Iran to meet their basic needs are facing problems due to the lack of work and government pressures,” said Sharifullah, an Afghan migrant in Iran.

“When the police inspect refugees on the streets, they do not respect their documents and refugees are frequently harassed and extorted,” said an Afghan migrant in Pakistan.

Meanwhile, some migrant rights activists called on international organizations working in the field of migration to pressure host countries to adhere to international laws in their treatment and deportation of migrants.

“Any kind of illegal treatment of migrants for their return should be within the framework of international laws and with respect for human dignity,” said Mohammad Khan Talebi, a migrant rights activist.

This comes as some Pakistani media outlets have reported that Islamabad has decided to intensify the process of deporting illegal migrants from the country once again.

Around 115,000 Afghan Migrants Return from Pakistan, Iran
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Mujahid at Doha 3 Urges Enhanced International Engagement

Tolo News

1 July 2024

Mujahid wrote on X that in a meeting with the Indonesian foreign minister, he emphasized strengthening relations between the two countries.

On the sidelines of the Doha 3 meeting, Zabihullah Mujahid, who leads the Islamic Emirate delegation, met with representatives from several countries to discuss Afghanistan issues.

Mujahid wrote on X that in a meeting with the Indonesian foreign minister, he emphasized strengthening relations between the two countries.

He added that in a meeting with the deputy and ambassador of the Kazakh Ministry of Foreign Affairs, they discussed expanding trade relations and maintaining diplomatic relations.

The Islamic Emirate delegation also met with the Norwegian representative, and Mujahid said that this country has a “constructive” view on Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, Zabihullah Mujahid, in his speech at the third Doha meeting, called for Western countries to engage with the Islamic Emirate.

Mujahid said: “Western countries should engage in a realistic and practical manner, just like regional countries.”

Mujahid said that Western countries, like regional countries, can remove obstacles to expanding relations with the Afghan government and move towards positive engagement.

Zabihullah Mujahid said that discussions on lifting banking sanctions and the cultivation of poppies would be held during the Doha meeting.

He called sanctions on the country’s banking system unfair.

Mujahid said that the foreign policy of the Islamic Emirate is economy-focused and concentrates on expanding relations with countries through construction and regional projects.

“In the past two years, we have made good progress in the construction of the TAPI gas pipeline with Turkmenistan. We hope that with the implementation of this project, Afghanistan will play a positive role in the exchange and connection of energy between Central and South Asia,” he said.

The second day of the Doha 3 meeting began today (Monday, July 1) in Doha, the capital of Qatar, and discussions are set to take place regarding the prevention of drug cultivation and support for Afghanistan’s private sector.

Mujahid at Doha 3 Urges Enhanced International Engagement
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