Pakistan wants undocumented migrants to leave by November 1 or get deported

Al Jazeera

Pakistan has ordered all undocumented immigrants, mainly nearly 1.73 million Afghan nationals, to voluntarily leave the country or face deportations.

“We have given them a November 1 deadline,” Interior Minister Sarfraz Bugti said on Tuesday amid claims by Islamabad that 14 of 24 suicide bombings in the country this year were carried out by Afghan nationals.

Bugti said an estimated 1.73 million Afghan nationals in Pakistan have no legal documents to stay, adding that a total of 4.4 million Afghan refugees live in Pakistan.

“There are no two opinions that we are attacked from within Afghanistan and Afghan nationals are involved in attacks on us,” he said. “We have evidence.”

Islamabad has received the largest influx of Afghan refugees since the Soviet invasion of their country in 1979. About 1.3 million Afghans are registered refugees in Pakistan and 880,000 more have legal status to remain, according to the latest United Nations figures.

“If they do not go, … then all the law enforcement agencies in the provinces or federal government will be utilised to deport them,” Bugti said.

It was not immediately clear how Pakistani authorities could ensure the undocumented immigrants leave or how they could find them to expel them.

Pakistan’s announcement, called “harassment” by the Afghan embassy in Islamabad, marked a new low in its relations with Kabul, which have deteriorated since border clashes between the South Asian neighbours last month.

In a statement on X, the embassy said more than 1,000 Afghans have been detained in the past two weeks – half of them despite having a legal right to be in Pakistan.

Fazal Rehman, a 57-year-old Afghan fruit seller in the northwestern city of Peshawar, said he arrived in Pakistan 30 years ago and his children have never been to Afghanistan.

He said he had never felt the need to register with Pakistani authorities and now fears it is too late to do so.

“We request the Pakistan government not to expel us in such a hasty way and allow us either to live here peacefully, or we should be given at least six months to one year time to go back,” he said.

Bugti said from November 1, Pakistan would allow entry only to Afghans with valid passports and visas.

For years, Afghans entering Pakistan through land borders were allowed to use their national identity cards as a travel document.

There is a huge waiting list in Afghanistan for nationals seeking to get passports, and obtaining a Pakistan visa can take months.

Bugti also warned of a crackdown on property and businesses owned by the Afghans in Pakistan.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES
Pakistan wants undocumented migrants to leave by November 1 or get deported
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C5+Germany Meeting Stresses Need for Inclusive Govt

But the Islamic Emirate’s spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, said that rights of all citizens of Afghanistan are observed in the country.

A joint statement of the meeting of the heads of states from Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan) with the Federal Chancellor of Germany, Olaf Scholz, said that the participants stressed the importance of an inclusive and representative government in Afghanistan with the active participation of all ethnic, religious and political groups, and the respect for and protection of basic human rights and fundamental freedoms of all Afghan citizens, and economic recovery to achieve lasting peace in Afghanistan.

The heads of the state reaffirmed their commitment to developing Afghanistan as a safe, peaceful, stable and prosperous country that respects the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all Afghan citizens, in particular women, girls and ethnic groups.

But the Islamic Emirate’s spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, said that rights of all citizens of Afghanistan are observed in the country.

He said that formation of an inclusive government is the internal matter of Afghanistan.

“The cabinet of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan is comprised of all tribes and representatives and the rights of all citizens including women have been ensured in the country,” Mujahid said.

This comes as analysts said that the formation of an inclusive government and respect for women’s rights can pave the way to deal with many challenges in the country.

“I hope the Islamic Emirate brings changes in its actions and understands the sensitivity of the issue, so we can solve the crisis within the country,” said Mohammad Omar Nuhzat, head of the Hizb-e-Ama.

“According to Islam, the government should pass responsibility to the person who is committed to Islam and also an expert at his job,” said Bilal Barwar, a political analyst.

Earlier, the participants of the Moscow Format also stressed the formation of an inclusive government in Afghanistan.

C5+Germany Meeting Stresses Need for Inclusive Govt
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Afghanistan closes embassy in India citing lack of diplomatic support

Al Jazeera
Published On 1 Oct 2023
The move comes due to lack of support from India and increasingly challenging conditions to operate, the embassy says.

The embassy of Afghanistan in India, which owed its allegiance to the former West-backed government, has announced its closure, saying it would cease operations starting from October 1.

The Afghan embassy’s statement on Saturday said it wanted to reach an agreement with the Indian government to ensure that the interests of Afghans living, working, studying and doing business in India are safeguarded.

Afghans account for around one-third of the nearly 40,000 refugees registered in India, according to the United Nations’ refugee agency. But that figure excludes those who are not registered with the UN.

“There has been a significant reduction in both personnel and resources available to us, making it increasingly challenging to continue operations,” the statement said.

The closure comes more than two years after the Taliban government stormed back to power triggering the collapse of the government of President Ashraf Ghani in the wake of the US withdrawing its troops after 20 years of war and occupation.

“It is with profound sadness, regret, and disappointment that the Embassy of Afghanistan in New Delhi announces this decision to cease its operations,” the embassy said.

The decision was taken due to lack of “crucial support” from India which has hampered the embassy’s capacity to carry out the embassy’s duties, read the statement.

There were also shortcomings in meeting the expectations to best serve Afghani citizens due to “the absence of a legitimate functioning government in Kabul”, read the statement, referring to the Taliban administration.

The closure follows reports that the ambassador and other senior diplomats had left India in recent months, with infighting among those remaining in New Delhi. But the embassy rejected speculations regarding internal infighting among its staff, stressing that these were “unfounded” rumours.

India will take control of the embassy in a caretaker capacity, it said.

At the time of publication, India’s foreign ministry did not issue any statement in response to the announcement.

No country officially recognises Afghanistan’s new government, but acknowledge the Taliban as the de facto ruling authority.

This has left many Afghan embassies and consulates in limbo, with diplomats appointed by the former government refusing to cede control of embassy buildings and property to representatives chosen by the Taliban authorities.

India has not recognised the Taliban government, which seized power in Afghanistan in August 2021. It evacuated its own staff from Kabul ahead of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan two years ago and no longer has a diplomatic presence there.

Yet, New Delhi is keen to retain ties with the country where its regional rival Pakistan wields considerable influence. Indian envoys have previously met Taliban representatives in Doha, the capital of Qatar, where the group has an office.

Last year, India sent relief materials, including wheat, medicine, COVID-19 vaccines and winter clothes to Afghanistan to help with shortages there.

In June last year, India sent a team of officials to its embassy in Kabul.

Before the Taliban took control, India provided Afghan security forces with training and military equipment but had no troops on the ground. It was also the region’s largest provider of development aid to Afghanistan.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
Afghanistan closes embassy in India citing lack of diplomatic support
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Taliban Undertake Speedy Overhaul of Afghanistan’s Justice System

Under this summary judicial system, most cases are resolved swiftly, often receiving a verdict on the very first appearance before a tribunal. Plaintiffs and defendants make brief presentations, and a judgment is rendered.

Even in the most serious criminal cases, the absence of prosecutors investigating and presenting the facts to a jury or court means that thorough judgments are a rarity.

The Taliban dismantled Afghanistan’s attorney-general office in 2021, deeming it an unnecessary bureaucratic appendage that fostered corruption and inefficiency.

Under the new system, every aspect — from assigning cases to charging and sentencing — must be carried out in the presence of a judge without the involvement of public prosecutors, according to Abdul Malik Haqqani, the Taliban’s deputy chief justice.

“A judge cannot base his decision on a prosecutor’s investigations. This is our Sharia principles,” Haqqani told a local television channel this week.

Farid Hamidi, Afghanistan’s former attorney-general who now lives in the United States, described the dissolution of the attorney-general’s office as a mortal blow to justice in the country.

“A prosecutor’s only job is to help judges have all the facts before issuing a verdict on a case,” Hamidi told VOA. “This is a widely accept principle all over the world, which aims to ensure only justice is served.”

When the Taliban seized power in 2021, they not only dismantled the attorney-general’s office but persecuted former prosecutors who had previously built criminal cases against thousands of Taliban insurgents.

Thousands of prisoners the Taliban set free from jails across Afghanistan in 2021 have sought to carry out reprisals against prosecutors and judges resulting in the killings of more than a dozen former prosecutors, the U.N. human rights body reported in January.

Speed

What sets the Taliban’s justice system apart is its speed.

Unburdened by bureaucratic red tape, Taliban judges have resolved more than 200,000 cases in the past two years, including thousands that had been backlogged in the previous government’s judiciary.

However, critics argue that expeditious verdicts should not come at the cost of true justice.

“They are sacrificing justice for speed,” said Hamidi.

Afghans, who often complained about the sluggishness and bureaucracy of the former government’s courts, have praised the Taliban’s swift justice.

“Sometimes justice delayed is justice denied and sometimes it is most important to move incrementally and achieve a result based on better information,” Neal Davins, a professor of law at William & Mary Law School, told VOA.

The United Nations and human rights bodies have denounced the Taliban’s criminal justice system as brutally harsh.

While the Taliban defend public displays of corporal punishment as consistent with Islamic law, the U.N. deems them inhumane and violations of international conventions against torture.

The Taliban also claim effective enforcement of court orders, contrasting it with the reported shortcomings of the former Afghan government in implementing justice over powerful individuals.

In a bizarre event in November 2015, Khalilullah Ferozi, a banker sentenced to jail for financial crimes, walked out of his cell to sign a multi-million-dollar real estate contract with the Ministry of Urban Development.

In another widely reported incident in November 2016, a former vice president who was accused of detaining and sexually assaulting a tribal rival in Kabul brazenly bore no legal or penal responsibility.

Absolute monarchy

The Taliban have suspended Afghanistan’s constitution guaranteeing the political and administrative independence of the judiciary.

There is also no written document stipulating the appointment of judges, their authorities and judicial accountability.

“We are only accountable to our leader…matters related to authorities of Sultan and King are referred to our leader,” said Haqqani, the deputy chief justice.

That the judiciary is accountable only to the Sultan, according to Haqqani, is a testament to its independence from both internal and external interventions.

For decades, the Taliban fought the previous Afghan government, accusing it of being a puppet regime serving foreign interests.

While they claim total independence in the way they now govern Afghanistan, the Taliban have widely been reported as a proxy of the Pakistani military — accusations both Pakistan and the Taliban reject.

“The powers and limits of every public institution must be enshrined in a public document or a constitution. Without that the independence of judiciary has no actual meaning,” contended Hamidi.

The absence of written laws has left judicial verdicts open to varying interpretations of broad Islamic rules.

That legal ambiguity has led to serious human rights violations, such as the indefinite detention and torture of individuals without specified charges or the right to a court hearing.

The Taliban’s intelligence agency, for instance, has indefinitely detained and tortured individuals on charges not specified in any law without giving detainees a right to a court hearing, according to independent human rights organizations.

Matiullah Weesa, an activist for girls’ education, has been languishing in Taliban detention for about six months without charges.

Backed by the United States, the former Afghan government had a progressive constitution, which, although symbolic and marred by allegations of violations, sought to distribute power democratically with equal rights for all citizens, regardless of gender.

“A constitution is only as good as the people who interpret/enforce it. It typically serves a useful purpose in constraining government and protecting individual rights — but only if it is treated with respect,” said Davins.

Like other parts of the Taliban’s government, women are excluded from work at the judiciary and there are not any female judges to address disputes among female plaintiffs and defendants.

Called the world’s only gender-apartheid regime, the Taliban definitely claim they have given Afghanistan a better justice system than the one built with large international support.

Taliban Undertake Speedy Overhaul of Afghanistan’s Justice System
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No current talks with Taliban, Afghanistan’s Massoud says, promising guerrilla warfare

By

PARIS, Sept 29 (Reuters) – There are no talks with the Taliban to negotiate a peace settlement, Afghan anti-Taliban leader Ahmad Massoud said on Thursday, vowing to step up “guerrilla warfare” to bring the hardline Islamists to the negotiating table.

Speaking in an interview in Paris, Massoud, the exiled leader of the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRF), said that the only way for the Taliban to achieve legitimacy would be to hold elections, but there was no prospect of that happening for now.

“The Taliban are refusing any talks of negotiation and they just want the world and the people of Afghanistan to just accept that this is the only way going forward, which it is not,” said Massoud, son of the former anti-Soviet mujahideen commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, said late on Thursday.

The NRF groups opposition forces loyal to Massoud. It opposed the Taliban takeover and clashes have occurred since August 2021 between the two sides in the resistance movement’s stronghold of Panjshir, north of the capital Kabul.

Massoud, who operates from overseas, said the NRF had been forced to change tactics because it could not fight the well-equipped Taliban conventionally.

“We chose last year a more pragmatic approach and that is guerrilla warfare. That is why you see less of us but more impact,” he said, adding that the number of fighters had grown from 1,200 to 4,000.

The 34-year-old, who was in Paris to launch a new book, said his fighters were not receiving any military assistance, but were relying on stocks from the decades of war in the country and needed ammunition.

“It is enough to be a headache for the Taliban, but not to topple them or to create too much pain for them so they come for proper, meaningful talks. So, this is the thing the world must understand,” he said.

Massoud dismissed any suggestion of returning to Afghanistan as part of a Taliban reintegration scheme of former officials.

“Those people who left Afghanistan, they left for more than just house or a car. They left for noble causes. They left for some principles,” he said.

“If the Taliban announced that they accept elections, today we all can return because this is what we want.”

The most recent elections in Afghanistan were held under the U.S.-backed administration which Taliban deposed in August 2021 when Western troops withdrew. The Taliban dissolved the country’s elections commission in December 2021.

Many Western governments do not formally recognise the Taliban administration, notably over its treatment of women in the country. But there is little pressure or desire to once again get involved in the country with their focus primarily on the war in Ukraine.

“We try to tell the West that maybe you’re busy with Ukraine, but at the same time, you need to pay attention to the situation in Afghanistan because the situation in Afghanistan is a ticking bomb,” Massoud said.

Reporting by John Irish; Editing by Michael Perry

No current talks with Taliban, Afghanistan’s Massoud says, promising guerrilla warfare
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Moscow Meeting on Afghanistan Addresses Inclusive Govt, Rights, Terrorism

The Chinese special envoy for Afghanistan, Yue Xiaoyong, said the US and its allies caused destruction in Afghanistan over the past two decades.

The fifth Moscow Format was held on Friday in the city of Kazan in Russia, where participants exchanged views on the formation of an inclusive government and ensuring human rights as well as counter-terrorism.

The representatives of more than 10 countries participated in the Moscow format.

Speaking at the Moscow Format, acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said that the Islamic Emirate doesn’t prescribe methods of governance to others, so it expects regional countries to engage with the Islamic Emirate instead of giving prescriptions for the formation of the government of Afghanistan.

“We call on all countries, particularly the neighboring countries, to not prescribe governance to us but instead start officially to work in all areas with the Islamic Emirate,” he said.

The Russian special envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, said the Taliban failed to take proper actions against the terrorist groups including Daesh in Afghanistan.

“Western countries, which caused irreparable harm to the Afghan people, should bear the primary burden of rebuilding the country. In this regard, Washington’s blocking of Afghan financial assets is counterproductive and only exacerbates the situation,” said Kabulov.

“It further complicates the already challenging living conditions for ordinary Afghans. Under any circumstances, we consider the return of US and NATO military infrastructure to the territory of Afghanistan and neighboring states to be unacceptable, regardless of the reasons they may put forward on this matter.”

The Chinese special envoy for Afghanistan, Yue Xiaoyong, said the US and its allies caused destruction in Afghanistan over the past two decades.

“The regional and international community should keep on urging the US to live up to its commitments for Afghanistan and live up to its responsibility to Afghanistan. As we know, 20 years of America and NATO’s occupation is major reason now what we have seen happening … the destruction and suffering of Afghan people. The US and its allies have cut up aid, frozen Afghanistan’s oversees assets and imposed unilateral sanctions worsening the suffering of Afghan people,” Xiaoyong said.

The envoys from Pakistan and Iran also stressed the need for engagement with Afghanistan but called for the formation of an inclusive government in the country.

Hassan Kazimi Qomi, Iran’s special envoy for Afghanistan, stressed the need “to ensure rights to education without gender discrimination, and for a legitimate political government in which all ethnic groups of Afghanistan be accepted, and for the guarantee of security of the neighbors.”

The envoys of Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar and Turkey were invited to the Moscow Format as observers.

Moscow Meeting on Afghanistan Addresses Inclusive Govt, Rights, Terrorism
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UN Official Urges “Taliban to Reconsider” Policy on Female Education, Work

29 Sept 2023

Speaking at a press conference, he said that “keeping the girls” out of their schools is not going to strengthen the country.

The president of the 78th session of the General Assembly of the United Nations, Dennis Francis, called on the “Taliban to reconsider” policies regarding the education and work of women and girls in Afghanistan.

Speaking at a press conference, he said that “keeping the girls” out of their schools is not going to strengthen the country.

“Women and girls have unalienable rights, human rights that must be upheld and honored. So I would urge the Afghan authorities to reconsider the policy and allow girls to go to school to get an education. So that they can play a role in the development of the community and the society,” Francis said.

The Islamic Emirate said that the Islamic Emirate does not oppose the rights of education for girls and that efforts are underway to reach a “proper and logical stance” in this regard.

“We deny that the ground for their education will not be paved or that we are against education but we are working on a procedure which will take some time, ” said Zabiullah Mujahid, Islamic Emirate’s Spokesman.

However, a women’s rights activist said that the international community lacks a practical process to take actions in support of female education in Afghanistan.

“They should stop talking and making statements. They should take practical actions, so that the situation of women and girls improves in Afghanistan. Currently, they are seeing all issues about women through statements, said Frozan Daudzai, a women’s rights activist.

Earlier, the UN special rapporteur for Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, said that the “Afghan women must be meaningfully included with policy decisions … made within Afghanistan or by the international community.”

UN Official Urges “Taliban to Reconsider” Policy on Female Education, Work
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Russia hosts the Taliban for talks on regional threats and says it will keep funding Afghanistan

Associated PressSeptember 29, 2023

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Moscow will keep helping Afghanistan on its own and through the U.N. food agency, Russian officials said Friday as they hosted Taliban representatives for talks on regional threats.

The talks in the Russian city of Kazan came as Moscow is trying to maintain its influence in Central Asia even as it wages war on Ukraine. The discussions focused on regional threats and creating inclusive government, Russian state news agency Tass reported.

President Vladimir Putin’s special representative for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov attended the gathering and said Russia is inclined to keep helping Afghanistan independently and through the World Food Program.

A letter from Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was read at the talks, accusing Western countries of “complete failure” in Afghanistan, saying they should “bear the primary burden of rebuilding the country.”

The Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in mid-August 2021 as U.S. and NATO troops were in the final weeks of their pullout from the country after 20 years of war.

Following their takeover, the Taliban gradually imposed harsh edicts, as they did during their previous rule of Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, based on their interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia. They barred girls from school beyond the sixth grade and women from almost all jobs and public spaces.

No country has formally recognized the Taliban as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan. The United Nations says that recognition is “nearly impossible” while the severe Taliban restrictions on women and girls are in place.

Moscow has since 2017 hosted talks with the Taliban and other representatives from other Afghan factions, China, Pakistan, Iran, India and the former Soviet nations in Central Asia. Taliban representatives were not at the last meeting, in November. No other Afghan factions attended Friday’s talks.

Russia had worked for years to establish contacts with the Taliban, even though it designated the group a terror organization in 2003 and never took it off the list. Any contact with such groups is punishable under Russian law, but the Foreign Ministry has responded to questions about the apparent contradiction by saying its exchanges with the Taliban are essential for helping stabilize Afghanistan.

The Soviet Union fought a 10-year war in Afghanistan that ended with its troops withdrawing in 1989.

Afghanistan’s Taliban-appointed Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said Friday that other countries should stop telling them what to do.

“Afghanistan doesn’t prescribe forms of governance to others, so we expect regional countries to engage with the Islamic Emirate rather than give prescriptions for the formation of a government in Afghanistan,” he said in Kazan. The Taliban call their administration the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.

He invited people to come and see Afghanistan for themselves, and asserted that “tourists, diplomats, aid workers, journalists and researchers” travel to the country with confidence and roam freely.

 

Russia hosts the Taliban for talks on regional threats and says it will keep funding Afghanistan
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Retired Kabul University Professor Sells Clothes on Street to Survive

Abdul Qayum Khajazada taught at the Faculty of Science of Kabul University for 35 years and retired during the previous government.

A retired professor at Kabul University has been forced to sell second-hand goods at the side of the road in Herat city because his pension has not been paid.

Abdul Qayum Khajazada taught at the Faculty of Science of Kabul University for 35 years and retired during the previous government.

He said that he has to sell clothes on the streets in order to support his family of six members.

“I retired at the age of 65. Because the pension is not being paid right now and my children are hungry, I had to turn to selling things, especially second-hand things,” Khajazada said.

“Specialists and academics play an essential role in the growth of society and their needs should be taken seriously. But unfortunately, recently, many people were forced to do hard labor because their pensions are not being paid, and this issue can increase their vulnerability,” said Sayed Ashraf Sadat, civil rights activist.

Abdul Qayum Khajazada has worked in the Presidential Palace and Afghanistan’s National Radio and Television for several years in addition to teaching at the university.

“He has helped the society and the students, members of the society,” said Hamza, a student.

“When we see that our teachers have left their jobs, and do not have the desire to teach at universities, we cannot do our duty,” said Ramin, another student.

The economic problems in society have gotten worse during the last two years as a result of the rise of unemployment and poverty.

Abdul Qayum Khajazada asked the Islamic Emirate to pay the salaries of all retirees in the country.

Retired Kabul University Professor Sells Clothes on Street to Survive
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The Moscow Format Meeting to Take Place on September 29

Some political analysts think that if this meeting does not provide a result, it will not have any impact on the situation in Afghanistan.

The fifth Moscow Format meeting on Afghanistan will take place Friday in Kazan, Russia.

Earlier, the Russian special envoy for Afghanistan, Zamir Kabulov, said that this meeting will focus on the topic of inclusivity of the current Afghan government, counterterrorism, and drug-related crime.

Amir Khan Muttaqi, the acting foreign minister of the Islamic Emirate, who went to Russia to attend the meeting, met with various Russians before the meeting.

“Russia is one of the close-by nations to Afghanistan and one of the superpowers that may play an essential and crucial role in Afghanistan. I wish Afghans would embrace such meetings,” said Salim Paigir, a political analyst.

The US Department of State’s spokesman Matthew Miller, addressing a press briefing, said that a US representative will not be attending the Moscow Format meeting.

“I don’t have much to say about that other than that we’re aware of the Moscow format meeting taking place. We are not members of the Moscow format, so a US representative will not be attending,” Miller noted.

Some political analysts think that if this meeting does not provide a result, it will not have any impact on the situation in Afghanistan.

“It is the responsibility of Muttaqi, who should have been to [the Moscow Format meeting] with a very excellent strategy and plan to satisfy the East and the West that we are fighting terrorist groups in Afghanistan and that our land will not be used against your land,” said Zakiullah Mohammadi, a political analyst.

Previously, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that the joint statement of the participating nations will be approved at the end of this meeting.

The Moscow Format Meeting to Take Place on September 29
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