Cash-strapped Taliban selling tickets to ruins of Buddhas it blew up

BAMIAN, Afghanistan — The three Taliban soldiers gazed down at the gaping hole in the 125-foot cliff where one of Afghanistan’s two great Buddha figures once stood and wondered aloud who was to blame for its destruction 22 years ago.

“This is the identity of our country,” said Kheyal Mohammad, 44, wearing a camouflage cap as he bent over a railing at the top of the giant cavity. “It shouldn’t have been bombed.”

The soldiers, taking a rare day off from military training to visit the site, agreed that the people who had destroyed the work were “careless,” and it should be rebuilt. “If God wills,” Mohammad exclaimed.

In 2001, Taliban founder Mohammad Omar declared the Buddhas false gods and announced plans to destroy them. Ignoring pleas from around the world, Taliban fighters detonated explosives and fired antiaircraft guns to smash the immense sixth-century reliefs to pieces.

The attack on the treasured ancient monument stunned the international community and cemented the Taliban’s reputation as uncompromising extremists.

With the group now back in power, Bamian holds new symbolic and economic importance to the cash-strapped region: Officials see the Buddha remnants as a potentially lucrative source of revenue and are working to draw tourism around the site. They suggest their efforts are not only a gesture to archaeologists, but also reflect a regime that’s more pragmatic now than when it first ruled from 1996 to 2001.

“Bamian and the Buddhas in particular are of great importance to our government, just as they are to the world,” Atiqullah Azizi, the Taliban’s deputy culture minister, said in an interview. He said more than 1,000 guards have been assigned to protect cultural heritage across Afghanistan, restricting access and overseeing ticket sales. Staffers at Kabul’s national museum were surprised last month to see senior Taliban officials at the inauguration of a prominent museum section dedicated to Buddhist artifacts.

But other Taliban members struggle to embrace artifacts they still find blasphemous. Bamian provincial governor Abdullah Sarhadi said he is committed to preserving Afghanistan’s cultural heritage. But he said tourists should be steered toward other sites.

“We are Muslims,” Sarhadi, who says he was held by the United States at Guantánamo Bay, said in an interview. “We should follow the demands of God.” He defended the order to destroy the Buddhas as a “good decision.”

For archaeologists, Bamian is a test of whether Afghanistan’s rich cultural heritage, which also includes synagogues and Hindu artifacts, can survive the return of the Taliban. But it could also help answer a much broader question: What kind of government does the regime want to be this time — and how much has it really changed since 2001?

Visitors entering Bamian’s small provincial capital, surrounded by potato fields in the shadow of the snow-capped Hindu Kush mountains, pass a sign that blames the “terrorist Taliban group” for the Buddhas’ destruction. The word “terrorist” has been mostly crossed out.

Authorities have set up a ticket office at the foot of the larger of the two figures, where they charge Afghans 58 cents and foreigners $3.45 to visit. Armed guards sit next to an ice cream vendor nearby. There are few customers.

The main hotel here is fenced off with barbed wire, but gold chandeliers flicker above Japanese, Australian and Taliban flags. Paintings on the walls depict the Buddhas before they were defaced. A new souvenir market is being planned nearby, according to Saifurrahman Mohammadi, information and culture director for the regional Taliban government.

At 26, Mohammadi is too young to remember the monument’s destruction. He says it’s time for the world to move on.

“We’re talking about something that happened decades ago,” he said. His office building features a map of World Heritage sites from the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Since 2003, UNESCO has designated the defaced Buddhas, a fortified citadel and other excavations in Bamian as endangered historic sites.

Last year, Mohammadi said, 200,000 registered tourists, most of them Afghans, visited the province, spending an average of $57 each. With additional efforts to promote and revitalize the area, he added, tourism “could become a significant source of income.”

In one of the world’s least developed countries, Bamian has long been one of its poorest regions. The population tries to eke out its living on coal mining and subsistence farming. “These archaeological sites could massively improve people’s lives here,” Mohammadi said.

But people here are skeptical. Few have forgiven the atrocities that human rights groups say the Taliban committed from 1996 to 2001 against the region’s predominantly Shiite Muslim population of minority ethnic Hazaras, a relatively progressive and educated but impoverished minority that remains outspoken against Taliban policies today.

As the economy continues to deteriorate, with international sanctions imposed and cuts in humanitarian aid limiting the inflow of money, there seems little here for people to celebrate.

The teenage sisters who run a dimly lit souvenir shop in Bamian say the street once bustled with tourists who bought colorful Afghan dresses and hand-knotted rugs depicting the Buddhas. But since the Taliban returned, they say, business has fallen 50 percent.

“The shop won’t survive if things continue as they are,” said one sister, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. The day before, she said, the Taliban had inspected the private education center where she studies. Finding boys and girls in the same classroom, they halted classes for the day. The girl said she was too afraid to return that morning.

“I’m scared,” she said. “There is no good future here.”

These days, the Bamian Buddhas mostly attract two very different kinds of visitors. Some are Taliban soldiers stationed nearby who are stunned by the beauty of the carved-out cliffs. Others are educated urban Afghans who are angry at the Taliban for destroying the works — and the lives they built during the 20 years the group was out of power.

As visitors toured the site on a recent spring day, some complained within hearing distance of guards.

“The Taliban have a mentality from 500 years ago,” said a 27-year old man visiting from Iran. “They’re mentally not capable of making use of this place.”

Sayed, a 22-year old Afghan man, said he had driven all day to reach the site, curious to learn about his country’s history before Islam became its dominant religion. The Taliban, he said, cannot be trusted with preserving the site.

“They are professionals at destroying things,” he said. “Not at rebuilding them.”

‘The entire world’s heritage’

While concern for Bamian is shared by a range of organizations and experts, there’s been little archaeological work done here since the Taliban’s return in August 2021 led foreign governments and donors to freeze aid and withdraw their archaeologists.

Mohammadi said the government has added guards and gates to protect the site but is unable to finance more extensive work. The groups that left, he said, are welcome to return and resume their projects. “We urge them as government members but also as humans,” he said. “This is the entire world’s heritage.”

But many nonprofits and donors say it would be immoral to return to Afghanistan while the Taliban increases restrictions on women.

Separately, even before the Taliban returned, foreigners disagreed on what to do with the Buddhas. Some favored reconstruction; others wanted to preserve the current remnants.

Today, the site is overlooked by a sprawling but empty cultural center and museum that was built mostly during the Taliban’s absence. Taliban officials allowed a Washington Post team to peer into the site. Sealed doors led to storage rooms where artifacts, visible through slits, appeared to be intact.

UNESCO, which championed the construction of the center, said its opening “has been postponed indefinitely” as a result of the “political context.” While artifacts in the center appear to be safe, the organization said, it remains “deeply concerned about the conservation of the Bamiyan site” after looting and illegal excavations in 2021.

But in a sign that some international archaeologists could ultimately return, UNESCO recently resumed a project with 100 local workers to secure paths and develop conservation works in Bamian.

Philippe Marquis, who heads a French archaeological delegation focused on Afghanistan, says he’s more worried about other, less famous sites. Examining satellite imagery of northern Afghanistan, he says, his delegation recently spotted signs of large-scale excavations. They fear they were signs that economically desperate Afghans might be trying to sell artifacts.

Azizi, the deputy culture minister, strongly denied any government involvement. He said authorities are committed to prosecuting looters.

Marquis said the Taliban “have understood that destroying archaeological sites or historical buildings is not going to gain them support.”

“But the fact is that they are totally lacking capacity and expertise. And they’re the first ones to acknowledge it.”

Drawing foreign tourists will be a challenge. Marc Leaderman’s British-based company led tours of Bamian before the Taliban’s return. Now, he says, neither he nor his clients are interested in returning.

Afghanistan still has “a huge amount to offer,” Leaderman said, but with the Taliban back in power, “there is just not a lot of joy in the country at the moment.”

Not everyone agrees. One recent afternoon, a group of government officials — some Taliban members, some holdovers from the U.S.-backed government they overthrew — were enjoying a trip to Band-e-Amir, a national park near Bamian that features clear blue lakes and pedal-operated swan boats for rent.

“We’re stunned,” said Mohammad Younus Mukhles, 30, a former Taliban fighter who was drinking tea and laughing with comrades in a pedal boat. “It’s very safe.”

Pamela Constable in Islamabad, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Cash-strapped Taliban selling tickets to ruins of Buddhas it blew up
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Taliban’s central-bank governor meets Chinese envoy to discuss banking ties

By 
Reuters

June 16 (Reuters) – The Taliban’s acting governor of the Afghan central bank met China’s ambassador this week to discuss banking relations and business, the bank’s spokesperson told Reuters on Friday.

Afghanistan’s banking system has been severely hampered by U.S.-led sanctions, a drop in liquidity from frozen central bank assets and a cut in development spending. Regulatory risk concerns of international banks have also largely cut off the country’s formal banking sector from the global financial system.

China does not have formal diplomatic ties with Afghanistan but has continued to maintain an embassy in Kabul since the Taliban took over the country in 2021. Beijing has recently signalled economic interest in its neighbour, and although some Chinese business executives have raised security concerns, they have said they are looking into investment opportunities, especially in mining.

“In this meeting, economy, banking relations, business and some related topics were discussed,” the bank’s spokesperson Hassibullah Noori told Reuters, adding the meeting took place on Thursday in Kabul between Ambassador Wang Yu and acting governor Mullah Hidayatullah Badri.

The Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson’s office said in a statement to Reuters that the ambassador had met Badri and other heads of “relevant departments” in recent days.

“Both sides exchanged opinions on strengthening China-Afghanistan cooperation in areas such as the economy and trade,” the statement said, adding financial sanctions on Afghanistan were hampering the country’s development.

“China has always supported the peaceful reconstruction of Afghanistan, provides sincere help to Afghanistan, and welcomes Afghanistan to join the Belt and Road Initiative,” it said.

Badri is a senior Taliban figure who became acting head of the central bank in March after stepping down as acting finance minister. He was head of the economic commission of the Islamic Emirate, as the Taliban refer to their government, as they conducted a 20-year insurgency against the former Western-backed government of Afghanistan, according to Taliban officials, and he ran most of the Taliban’s fundraising operations at the time.

Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield in Islamabad; Additional reporting by Laurie Chen in Beijing Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Frances Kerry
Taliban’s central-bank governor meets Chinese envoy to discuss banking ties
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UN in talks about possibly handing over Afghan teaching projects to Taliban

By 
Reuters

June 15 (Reuters) – The U.N. children’s agency said it was holding discussions with Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban over “timelines and practicalities” for a possible required handover of its education programmes and that classes would continue in the meantime.

Aid officials say that the Taliban had signalled international organisations could no longer be involved in education projects, in a move criticised by the U.N. but not yet confirmed by Afghan authorities.

UNICEF said it had received assurances from the education ministry that its community-based classes, which educate 500,000 students, would continue while they discussed the matter.

“As the lead agency for the education cluster in Afghanistan, UNICEF is engaged in constructive discussions with the de facto Ministry of Education and appreciates the commitment from the de facto minister to keep all … classes continuing while discussions take place about timelines and practicalities,” UNICEF’s Afghanistan spokesperson, Samantha Mort, told Reuters.

“In order to minimise disruption to children’s learning, it is imperative that any handover to national NGOs is done strategically and includes comprehensive assessment and capacity building.”

A spokesperson for the Taliban did not respond to request for comment. The Ministry of Education has not publicly confirmed the policy.

The Taliban, who took power in 2021, have closed most secondary schools to girls, stopped female students attending universities and stopped many Afghan women working for aid groups and the United Nations in accordance with their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

International organisations have been heavily involved in education projects, and UNICEF made an agreement with the Taliban to run community classes before they took over the country.

Two humanitarian sources told Reuters this month that aid agencies had been told provincial authorities had been directed to stop the involvement of international organisations in education projects, possibly within weeks.\

The U.N. spokesperson in New York said the move would be a “horrendous step backwards”.

UNICEF runs many community-based classes including for 300,000 girls, often in homes in rural areas.

The Taliban took over Afghanistan after a 20-year insurgency against U.S.-led forces with a speed and ease that took the world by surprise.

Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield; Editing by Nick Macfie
UN in talks about possibly handing over Afghan teaching projects to Taliban
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UNICEF: 16M Children Need Protection and Humanitarian Assistance

The Ministry of Economics said that children in the country need humanitarian aid and support in the education sector.

UNICEF’s representative in Afghanistan Fran Equiza said that “16 million children” are in need of protection and humanitarian assistance.

Fran Equiza added that in Afghanistan, children’s rights are eroded every day and too many kids are burdened with responsibilities way beyond their age.

“That smile gives me hope. This smile and this child-friendly space, in a country with almost 16 million children, need protection and humanitarian assistance. In a country in which way too many kids are burdened with responsibilities way beyond their age, and children’s rights are eroded every day,”

The Ministry of Economics said that children in the country need humanitarian aid and support in the education sector, and the world should support the current government in both areas.

“Afghan children need support in two areas, in the area of humanitarian aid and in the area of education. We request the international community support the Islamic Emirate in both areas,” said Abdul Latif Nazari, the deputy minister of the Economy.

Meanwhile, some children in the capital said that because of their families and life, they face hard labor and they ask the Islamic Emirate to pay more attention to the rights of children.

“We call on the Islamic Emirate to pay attention to children so we can learn and be someone in the future,” said Najib, a child.

“I don’t want to work, I want to learn and become a pilot,” said Fahim, a child.

Earlier, the head of the labour organization in Afghanistan announced the increase in the number of child labourers in the country and said that the battles of several decades and the poverty of families are considered the main reasons for child labor.

UNICEF also said that In Afghanistan, 1 in 5 children is engaged in child labour, and it considered the political change in the country to be one of the factors influencing the increase in child labor.

UNICEF: 16M Children Need Protection and Humanitarian Assistance
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ICRC: Unemployment has Damaged Lives of Millions of People in Afghanistan

The ICRC called on the international community and development organizations to resume investing in Afghanistan.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said in a report that the number of unemployed people has significantly increased over the past two years in Afghanistan.

According to the report, “in addition to other humanitarian crises, unemployment has damaged the lives of millions of people in Afghanistan. People living with disabilities are among the most affected.”

The ICRC called on the international community and development organizations to resume investing in Afghanistan.

“The ICRC welcomes any decision that will enable Afghan families to better cope with the dire economic condition and calls on the international community and development organizations to resume investing in Afghanistan, to prevent the situation from worsening further,” the report reads.

“A large part of this aid is necessary to be used for large infrastructural and economic projects in order to make the employment environment favorable for the people and to reduce the economic problems of the people,” said Darya Khan Baheer, an economist.

In the meantime, some residents of Kabul asked the Islamic Emirate and relief organizations to provide work opportunities.

“The Islamic Emirate should increase employment opportunities for poor and destitute people,” said Saifullah, a resident of Kabul.

According to the Ministry of Economy, to reduce poverty in the country, it is necessary to invest in infrastructure projects.

“As much as Afghanistan’s economic infrastructure is strengthened, to that extent we will overcome poverty. Our effort is to direct the international community’s aid to infrastructure and development projects,” said Abdul Latif Nazari, the deputy of the Ministry of Economy.

A International Committee of the Red Cross report stated that nearly twenty million people in Afghanistan, which constitutes 44% of the country’s population, do not have access to sufficient food.

Based on the ICRC report, nearly 20 million Afghans (44 percent of the population) do not have enough to eat, and an estimated 34 million Afghans (79 percent) live in poverty.

ICRC: Unemployment has Damaged Lives of Millions of People in Afghanistan
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Yaqoob Mujahid Denies Internal Disputes Within Islamic Emirate

The acting defense minister also mentioned US violations of Afghan airspace, saying that US has always done so.

Acting Minister of Defense Mawlawi Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid denied claims of disputes within the Islamic Emirate and said that any disputes that harm the system do not exist in the Islamic Emirate government.

In an interview with TOLOnews, Yaqoob Mujahid emphasized that reports made by international organizations concerning violations of human rights in Panjshir are untrue.

“I have worked and served for a very long time, and I myself have a lot of information in this system. There isn’t any division, opposition, confrontation, or anything else that would be detrimental for the system. This is just a process of propaganda against the system,” he added.

Referring to claims of human rights violations he said: “Where is it in Panjshir? When and how did it happen? In what form and to whom did it happen? It is only based on false reports, slander and propaganda they create and then spread. We request that what is being broadcast, as reliable institutions, should be impartial.”

The acting defense minister also mentioned US violations of Afghan airspace, saying that US has always done so.

According to Mawlawi Mohammad Yaqoob Mujahid, violating Afghanistan’s airspace is a violation of the Doha Agreement, and Washington has repeatedly violated this agreement.

“Airspace has been violated. It is still occupied by the Americans. I have explained this in the past as well,” Yaqoob Mujahid said.

In response to a question asking where Afghanistan would be in five years, the Acting Minister of Defense said he hoped for the development in the nation and the removal of challenges to education.

Yaqoob Mujahid Denies Internal Disputes Within Islamic Emirate
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Calls in Oslo for Islamic Emirate to Fulfill Commitments

The meeting was also attended by envoys from the US, UK, Qatar, Italy, India and Pakistan.

Participants at the meeting in Oslo, Norway on the Afghan situation stressed the need for the formation of an inclusive government in Afghanistan and discussed the Islamic Emirate’s commitments to the international community as well as the education of girls, a source told TOLOnews.

The second day of the meeting was held on Wednesday, and members of the Islamic Emirate were in attendance.

The UN Secretary General special envoy for Afghanistan, Roza Otunbayeva, attended the meeting, the source said.

According to the source, participants at the meeting also emphasized the need to start an intra-Afghan dialogue, as called for in the Doha agreement.

“There should be good efforts for the political situation and political engagement between the Islamic Emirate and international community. When political engagement is not taking place between the Islamic Emirate and the international community, we can never attract the humanitarian aid of the international community to our country,” said Ahmad Andar, political analyst.

The deputy spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Zia Ahmad Takal, told TOLOnews that Abdul Qahar Balkhi from the Foreign Ministry, Shamsuddin Mansour from the Interior Ministry and Rohullah Omar from the Defense Ministry participated in the meeting.

Also, Jafar Mahdawi from Hezb-e-Sar Jangal, Amin Karim from Hezb-e-Islami, and Kawun Kakar and Qahramana Kakar represented the civil society in this meeting.

“The international conference on Afghanistan will have legitimacy when the role of women is significant and women are supported politically,” said Nazillah Hassanzada, women’s rights activist.

The meeting was also attended by envoys from the US, UK, Qatar, Italy, India and Pakistan.

Meanwhile, the head of the Islamic Emirate’s Political Office in Qatar, Suhail Shaheen, said that the achievements of the Islamic Emirate and stance of the interim government on various issues will be specified in this meeting.

“The participation of the delegation of the Islamic Emirate’s government in the meetings on Afghanistan is needed so that the realities in Afghanistan and also the stance of the Islamic Emirate is conveyed to the international community,” he said.

The meeting is running from June 13 to 15.

Calls in Oslo for Islamic Emirate to Fulfill Commitments
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Positive Steps Taken on Water Treaty: Tehran

Kanaani also urged the Islamic Emirate to cooperate regarding the water rights.

The spokesman for Iran’s foreign ministry, Nasser Kanaani, said that an agreement has been made and positive steps have been taken regarding the Helmand Water Rights Treaty

Kanaani told a press conference that a delegation from Tehran arrived in Afghanistan and that there have been constructive negotiations between the two sides.

“There have been good negotiations with high level officials of the interim government in Afghanistan. It was agreed that the Afghan side will take new positive steps and essential actions should be taken in this regard,” he said. Kanaani also urged the Islamic Emirate to cooperate regarding the water rights. “Fulfillment of this right is a gesture that can point toward strengthened cooperation between the two countries,” Kanaani said.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Energy and Water (MoEW) said that the meetings between the two sides continue to address the issue.

“The occasional meetings between the commissioners of the Islamic Emirate and Islamic Republic of Iran have been continuing. The meetings focus on determining the situation of the year with the appropriate amount of water, normal years and abnormal years,” said Matiullah Abid, a spokesman for the MoEW.

Political analysts suggested that the sides should focus on negotiations to solve the problems.

“If a legal issue is mentioned, it should be solved through legal paths, the legal issues should not become politicized and the issues should not lead to political and military turmoil,” said Wais Naseri, a political analyst.

Positive Steps Taken on Water Treaty: Tehran
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Blinken: ‘We Have Relocated More Than 97,000 Afghans to US’

In the meantime, a number of Afghan refugees in the Abu Dhabi camp said that their fundamental desire is to be transferred to the US.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that overall more than 97,000 Afghans have been relocated to the United States.

Speaking at a signing ceremony to renew the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the US Department of State and the #AfghanEvac Coalition on Monday, June 12, Blinken said that US is working with AfghanEvac to relocate more Afghans faster.

“So thanks to the leadership that we’ve seen, thanks to our state and local partners, thanks to the generosity of our fellow citizens, we’ve relocated more than 24,000 Afghans to the United States and third countries since September 2021. Overall – (applause) – overall, we have relocated more than 97,000 Afghans to the United States – Afghans who are going to school, who are starting new jobs, who are settling into their communities,” he said.

US Secretary of State further stated: “This job is not yet done. The Memorandum of Understanding that we will shortly sign will allow us to keep sharing information with one another, to coordinate our outreach to additional civil society partners, to guide our ongoing efforts to find more, and better, ways to serve our Afghan partners – both those already here, and those yet to come – and keep pace with their evolving needs.”

“There is still so much more to be done, and I am grateful to be here today to reaffirm that we will continue to do this vital work together,” said Shawn VanDiver, head of AfghanEvac.

In the meantime, a number of Afghan refugees in the Abu Dhabi camp said that their fundamental desire is to be transferred to the US.

“Sadly, even though the US government has announced that it will speed up the process of reviewing the immigration cases of Afghans in the Abu Dhabi camp, we did not see this speed up,” said Feraidon Azhand, an Afghan journalist and refugee in Abu Dhabi.

AfghanEvac is a coalition of more than 200 organizations working alongside the US government to support Afghan relocation efforts.

Blinken: ‘We Have Relocated More Than 97,000 Afghans to US’
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Islamic Emirate Delegation Attends Meeting on Afghanistan in Norway

The Norwegian Refugee Council meanwhile said that the meeting is a huge opportunity to discuss the challenges of Afghanistan.

Norway’s foreign minister Anniken Huitfeldt announced the ministry “invited three people from the civil service in Kabul to participate in this year’s Oslo Forum,” adding “they are not from the political leadership of the Taliban.”

At the forum, which is ongoing now, these representatives are meeting “Afghan civil society and representatives from other countries to talk about the major challenges in Afghanistan,” Huitfeldt said.

Islamic Emirate foreign ministry spokesman Hafiz Zia Ahmad Takal confirmed that a delegation of the Islamic Emirate is participating in the meeting.

According to Takal, Abdul Qahar Balkhi from the Foreign Ministry, Shamsuddin Mansour from the Interior Ministry, and Rohullah Omar from the Defense Ministry participated in the meeting.

The meeting is due to be held for three days.

“The Norway meeting is organized by NGOs which have the experience of negotiations with the groups—that have a background of violence—and for that, they receive money from their government. Those who traveled from Kabul lack the authority for negotiation,” said Torek Farhadi, political analyst.

The Norwegian Refugee Council meanwhile said that the meeting is a huge opportunity to discuss the challenges of Afghanistan.

“We understand that there will be representatives of many countries at the conference and it is a huge opportunity to discuss the challenges of Afghanistan, including the humanitarian situation. The drivers of humanitarian crisis we are facing here including the dire economic situation can only be solved through dialogue. We hope the dialogue will continue including with the return of diplomats to Kabul, Afghanistan,” said Neil Turner, Country Director for Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, some Afghan women’s rights activists said such meetings will not help the situation of women in Afghanistan.

“This meeting may take one week or three days, such meetings cannot change the condition of Afghanistan, only negotiations happen there,” said Suraya Paikan, a women’s rights activist.

“Organizing such meetings have not had and will not have a benefit for the people of Afghanistan, particularly for the women in Afghanistan who are deprived of all types of rights,” said Laila Bssim, a women’s rights activist.

Islamic Emirate Delegation Attends Meeting on Afghanistan in Norway
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