Taliban recognition not a focus of Afghanistan meeting, says UN

By

Reuters

20 April 2023

UNITED NATIONS, April 20 (Reuters) – A U.N.-convened meeting on Afghanistan next month will not focus on the possible international recognition of the Taliban administration, a U.N. spokesperson stressed on Thursday after comments by the deputy U.N. chief sparked concern and confusion.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is set to host a closed-door gathering in Doha on May 1-2 of special envoys on Afghanistan from various countries. His deputy, Amina Mohammed, suggested on Monday the gathering “could find those baby steps to put us back on the pathway to recognition.”

“The Doha conference on the 1st and 2nd of May is not focusing on recognition and we don’t want there to be any confusion about that,” said deputy U.N. spokesperson Farhan Haq. “The point of discussion … is to build a more unified consensus on the challenges at hand.”

The Taliban seized power in August 2021 as U.S.-led forces withdrew following 20 years of war.

In December, the 193-member U.N. General Assembly approved postponing, for the second time, a decision on whether to recognize the Afghan Taliban administration by allowing them to send a United Nations ambassador to New York.

Earlier this month the Taliban began enforcing a ban on Afghan women working for the United Nations after stopping most women working for humanitarian aid groups in December. Since toppling the Western-backed government, they have also tightened controls over women’s access to public life, including barring women from university and closing most girls’ high schools.

The Taliban says it respects women’s rights in accordance with its strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Reporting by Michelle Nichols; editing by Jonathan Oatis
Taliban recognition not a focus of Afghanistan meeting, says UN
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Inspector General Says U.S. Aid May Be Flowing to the Taliban

The New York Times

The special inspector general for Afghanistan’s reconstruction accused the Biden administration of blocking his efforts to track assistance.

WASHINGTON — The top inspector general for Afghanistan accused the Biden administration on Wednesday of stonewalling his efforts to procure records about assistance to the country since the U.S. military evacuation, warning that American taxpayer dollars were probably ending up in the hands of the Taliban.

“I cannot assure this committee or the American taxpayer we are not currently funding the Taliban,” John Sopko, the special inspector general for Afghan reconstruction, or SIGAR, said at a House Oversight Committee hearing. “Nor can I assure you the Taliban are not diverting the money we are sending from the intended recipients.”

He ticked off ways in which Taliban fighters were “siphoning off” goods and funds entering Afghanistan, such as by diverting food assistance and by forcing groups to pay fees to operate in the country.

Mr. Sopko blamed weak oversight practices within the international organizations handling Afghan assistance, and what he called the “abject refusal” of the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development to allow oversight.

“We used to brief on a regular basis,” Mr. Sopko said of his prior engagements with the State Department, U.S.A.I.D. and the Pentagon, as he lamented a lack of access of records on what he said was over $8 billion in U.S. aid that had been provided to Afghanistan since the evacuation. “Since this administration came in, it’s been radio silence.” in Kabul to the frozen mountains shadowing the capital, Afghans are having to learn how to survive on less food.

The Biden administration pushed back on the allegations, effectively accusing the inspector general of misrepresenting the extent to which the administration has accommodated his requests and presuming a broader mandate than he was afforded under the law.

“Since SIGAR’s inception, U.S.A.I.D. has consistently provided SIGAR responses to hundreds of questions, as well as thousands of pages of responsive documents, analyses, and spreadsheets describing dozens of programs that were part of the U.S. government’s reconstruction effort in Afghanistan,” said Jessica Jennings, a spokeswoman for U.S.A.I.D. “We are frequently and regularly working with SIGAR on their requests.”

A State Department spokesman said that U.S. reconstruction activities in Afghanistan — the centerpiece of Mr. Sopko’s jurisdiction — ceased after the Taliban took over the government in August 2021.

The hearing had been billed as a venue to scrutinize the Biden administration’s actions during the withdrawal, a focus that the panel’s top Democrat, Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, criticized as “absurdly narrow.”

Mr. Sopko’s allegations nonetheless inspired rare bipartisan outrage among the lawmakers.

“Why is it that he’s being blocked from doing the thing that he was legally charged by this Congress — and previous Congresses?” said Representative Byron Donalds, Republican of Florida.

“This issue of not enough accountability — I don’t know how any of us can defend that,” said Representative Kweisi Mfume, Democrat of Maryland.

Congress created the watchdog office in 2008, and Mr. Sopko was appointed by President Barack Obama to run it in 2012. Since then, he has repeatedly clashed with the various agencies of the federal government involved in Afghanistan.

During Wednesday’s hearing, Mr. Sopko listed a few recent highlights of that adversarial relationship. He complained that the Biden administration had turned down his requests for copies of documents related to the Doha agreement, a deal the Trump administration struck with the Taliban that set the terms for the U.S. departure from Afghanistan.

He also charged that the State Department and U.S.A.I.D. had refused to answer “the simplest oversight questions we have,” such as identifying the organizations that have received American assistance for programs in Afghanistan since the U.S. withdrawal. Ms. Jennings called that assertion “inaccurate.”

The testimony came as multiple Republican-led committees in the House examine the Biden administration’s withdrawal from Afghanistan, and as the party takes aim at foreign assistance programs as it seeks to tighten the federal budget.

The Oversight Committee’s chairman, James R. Comer, Republican of Kentucky, hinted that assistance to Afghanistan also was not sacrosanct.

“The Biden administration is taking money out of the paychecks of American truckers, American teachers, American farmers, American builders and American soldiers and sending it to the same people who shot at those soldiers, who murdered those soldiers, until not long ago,” Mr. Comer said. “And the Biden administration has no interest in identifying the waste, fraud and abuse connected to Afghanistan.”

Mr. Sopko, for his part, clarified that his complaint was with his ability to conduct oversight over the funds being transferred to Afghanistan, not the assistance itself.

“I’m not opposed to humanitarian aid,” Mr. Sopko said. “If the purpose is to help the Afghan people, we have to have effective oversight to ensure the money goes to those people.”

A version of this article appears in print on April 20, 2023, Section A, Page 10 of the New York edition with the headline: Watchdog Says Taliban May Be Using U.S. Funds
Inspector General Says U.S. Aid May Be Flowing to the Taliban
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UNICEF in Afghanistan is ‘Committed to Stay and Deliver’

The UNICEF representative in Afghanistan said that 28 million people in Afghanistan, including 15 million children, are in need of humanitarian support.

The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said that “amidst increasing restrictions on women’s and girls’ rights in Afghanistan, and in a shrinking humanitarian space, UNICEF is committed to stay and deliver to the best of our ability.”

Fran Equiza, the UNICEF representative in Afghanistan, said despite all the challenges and with the support of our donors, government institutions, and men and women across the world, UNICEF stands with the women and children of Afghanistan.

“I can reassure you that UNICEF is committed to staying and delivering. To staying and delivering for the women and children in Afghanistan. And we will take any measures to adapt our operation to make sure we can deliver for the people,” Equiza said.

The UNICEF representative in Afghanistan said that 28 million people in Afghanistan, including 15 million children, are in need of humanitarian support and in need of protection support.

Nawgul, the sole provider for a family of four, said that because of poverty, she is forced to wait for assistance by the side of the road.

“I spend all of the Ramadan month on the roads. Who does not like to sit at home and break his fast and pray at home instead of praying on the road,” Nawgul said.

“I’m standing here asking a person to give me ten or fifty Afghanis, goods, or give me boots that I can wear,” Nadira said.

However, Abdul Latif Nazari, Deputy Minister of Economy, said that the current government will monitor and support the presence of organizations and supporting institutions.

“We keep an eye on and support the operations of international and relief agencies in Afghanistan. They can work with the government to lessen poverty, and their efforts should be focused on helping the Afghan people,” Nazari said.

UNICEF highlighted that without women, its operations will go slowly and once again asked the Islamic Emirate to refrain from hindering the work of women in humanitarian organizations.

UNICEF in Afghanistan is ‘Committed to Stay and Deliver’
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UN Spokesman: Recognition of Afghanistan in Hands of Member States

A spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, said that the current government has the right to be recognized by the world.

Following the remarks of the UN deputy chief Amina Mohammed about the recognition of the Islamic Emirate, now the UN Spokesman Stephane Dujarric, in a press conference, said that “the topic of recognition is in the hands of the member states.”

Earlier, UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed speaking at an academic event in the US said the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres plans to arrange a conference with various envoys to discuss granting recognition to the Islamic Emirate.

“Let me be clear. First of all, on the topic of recognition, that is clearly in the hands of the Member States. And it’s a fact, it’s according to the Charter, and there’s no question on that. To put, I think, a bit of a context to what the Deputy Secretary-General was saying:  She, as you know, has really been on the front lines of fighting for the inalienable rights of women and girls in Afghanistan,” Dujarric noted.

The UN spokesman added that the purpose of such a meeting will be to reinvigorate the international engagement around the common objectives for a durable way forward on the situation in Afghanistan.

“The purpose of this kind of small group meeting is for us to reinvigorate the international engagement around the common objectives for a durable way forward on the situation in Afghanistan. The Secretary-General has said and continues to believe that it’s an urgent priority to advance an approach based on pragmatism and principles, combined with strategic patience, and to identify parameters for creative, flexible, principled, and constructive engagement,” Dujarric said.

The permanent representative of Afghanistan in the UN Human Rights Council, and some political figures outside the country, reacted to the remarks of UN deputy chief Amina Mohammed.

“The UN high officials such as Amina J Mohammed, the custodians of the Charter& Values enshrine & developed over the past 75 years have to be sensible & responsible. Afghanistan’s history didn’t start on 15 August 2021. Don’t make the abnormal look normal. Afghans & world is watching U!,” Afghanistan in Geneva said in a tweet.

“The Islamic Emirate should consider a national approach about women’s work and education before they decide,” said Mohammad Ajmal Zurmati, an international relations expert.

Meanwhile, Zabihullah Mujahid, spokesman of the Islamic Emirate, said that the current government has the right to be recognized by the world.

“We want the rights of the Afghan people to be given and the Islamic Emirate to be raised as an accepted government,” Mujahid noted.

Earlier, the UN deputy chief said that it is expected that the Secretary General of the UN will hold a meeting on Afghanistan in Doha in the next two weeks.

UN Spokesman: Recognition of Afghanistan in Hands of Member States
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Millions close to hunger after WFP cuts food aid to Afghanistan

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Amina Mohammadi, a 34-year-old Afghan widow from the northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif, is among millions of Afghans reliant on rations provided by the World Food Programme (WFP).

But the mother of four is now worried about how to feed her children after the UN food agency last month announced drastic cuts in food assistance.

The WFP has warned that if donors do not pledge new funds, the agency will not have the resources to carry out any food assistance by June.

“Our food distributions will drop from 13 million people in March to nine million people in April and five million people in May down to zero in June and onwards,” Philippe Kropf, the head of communications at WFP, told Al Jazeera.

Last month, the WFP, which provides food assistance to more than 20 million Afghans, said a severe shortage of funds forced it to drastically reduce its food assistance to the South Asian country facing a humanitarian crisis.

“The country is at the highest risk of famine in a quarter of a century and WFP’s food assistance is the last lifeline for millions of Afghans,” Hsiao-Wei Lee, WFP country director in Afghanistan, said in a statement last month.

Six million Afghans, the UN agency warned, are one step away from famine.

“Since November last year, the WFP in Afghanistan had been warning that funds would run out. Now faced with funding shortfalls, WFP had to start to reduce its lifesaving assistance to millions of people across the country,” Kropf said.

Women-led households

The UN agency needs nearly $800m to run its food assistance programme in the country for the next six months, Kropf said.

Kropf explained that the organisation initially reduced the quantity of assistance to some of the recipients, providing them with two weeks of food per month, as opposed to the previous ration that was sufficient for three weeks.

The cuts in food assistance are harder for women-led households in Afghanistan, in particular, where the breadwinners find their rights to employment, education and even movement restricted by the Taliban rulers.

Mohammadi, whose husband was killed last year, says there are no jobs for women in her neighbourhood. “I do everything I can: I wash clothes at neighbourhood homes, I do some tailoring – but it’s not sufficient to support my children,” she said.

Mohammadi told Al Jazeera that the monthly rations and cash she received from the WFP saved her family, including her four children, including three sons – 12, seven and four, and a 10-year-old daughter, from hunger.

“For the last few months, I collected rations of flour, beans, tea, salt, and nutritious food for the children,” she told Al Jazeera.

The country has been teetering on the brink of famine and economic collapse since the Taliban’s return to power in August 2021 after 20 years of war and US occupation.

The war-torn country’s economy, which was largely dependent on foreign funding, has not been able to revive because West-led international sanctions have dried up many sources of international aid. The Taliban administration’s financial and diplomatic isolation has further exacerbated the humanitarian situation in the country.

Aseel – a company that started out as e-commerce platform, but shifted its technology and resources to address the growing humanitarian crises following the Taliban’s takeover in August 2021 – has been using technology to go around sanctions and help people in need.

Madina Matin, the communications manager at Aseel, said their digital and tech-driven approach has helped connect donors to Afghan families, benefitting more than 500,000 Afghans in the last year and a half.

“The [US-led] sanctions and banking restriction limit Afghanistan’s access to international financial institutions and donors, which can impact the ability of national organisations to secure funding for humanitarian aid,” Matin told Al Jazeera, adding that the sanctions also had a chilling effect, creating “hesitancy among donors to provide aid to a country under sanctions”.

The Afghan administration, which has not been recognised by any country in the world, has appealed for its recognition and the lifting of sanctions. It has also urged the US to release billions of dollars of frozen Afghan funds desperately needed to revive the economy.

The group has faced international censure for its decision to curb women’s freedoms, including a ban on university and school education.

‘My children will die if you stop the ration’

Al Jazeera reached Taliban officials in two northern provinces, Balkh and Baghlan, who said that they were also concerned about the cutbacks in aid and rations. However, they declined further comment for this article.

With the aid to her family set to be reduced, Mohammadi faces an uncertain future. During the holy month of Ramadan, when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk, she is already limiting the portions of the two meagre meals her children have in the day, she said.

“I don’t know yet if they will still give me a package for this month. And I don’t know how I will feed my kids if they don’t provide me with ration,” she worries.

“I have lost so much already, even my dignity. I am pleading to the international community; my children will die if you stop the ration,” she says.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA
Millions close to hunger after WFP cuts food aid to Afghanistan
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Afghan economic hopes threatened by Taliban – UN

By Kelly Ng

Weak signs of recovery in Afghanistan’s economy are at risk of being undone by Taliban restrictions on women working for NGOs, the UN says.

Donations to the UN are under threat of falling sharply because of the ban on Afghan women working for it, the United Nations Development Programme said.

The number of families living in poverty had nearly doubled in two years, its report found.

The Taliban said politics should not be linked with humanitarian aid decisions.

Afghanistan was pushed into economic collapse when the Taliban took over in 2021, and foreign funds that were being given to the previous regime were frozen.

Already, 34 million people – 90% of the population – are living below the poverty line. Two in three Afghans don’t know when they will get their next meal.

The UNDP report noted signs of hope brought about by inflows of foreign aid through different UN agencies – coupled with improved security conditions, a reported reduction in corruption and better tax collection by the Taliban government.

But it stressed: “The economy cannot be reignited if women cannot work, while future economic growth is constrained by under-investment in girls’ and women’s education.”

Last year, the Taliban banned Afghan women from working for non-governmental organisations. Girls were also barred from secondary school and women from university.

When the Taliban retook control of Afghanistan in August 2021, billions of dollars in Afghan assets held abroad were frozen as the international community waited for the Taliban to honour promises on security, governance and human rights – including allowing all girls to be educated.

The United Nations and other non-governmental organisations have since played a crucial role in saving Afghans from going hungry.

But the UN said 94% of 127 national organisations it had surveyed had fully or partially ceased operations after the ban on women employees was imposed in December.

About 150 NGOs and aid agencies have suspended all or part of their work.

A senior Taliban finance ministry official told the BBC’s Yogita Limaye in Kabul that the rules imposed on women were “internal matters” for the country and that their government was working to improve the economic situation.

“All the humanitarian aid and donations on the ground, those should not be related to these issues only,” said Mairaj Mohammad Mairaj, the ministry’s director for general revenue.

“It is our duty as men, in the Islamic view, to take care of our women sitting in their homes.”

Mr Mairaj said there had been “a lot of corruption and misuse of power” in the previous government.

“We have stopped ill-practices like bureaucracy, corruption from our departments – this was the reason we have a very well managed structure of revenue collection.

“We need not only aid – we need trade,” he said. “We need the international community to come and work with us.”s

Currently, more than a million children, male and female, have been forced to leave school to provide for their families.

Said Ali Akbar and his elder brother Ali Sena are among them. They hammer and weld away for nine hours each day in Kabul to earn just 150 Afghanis – less than $2.

“I really like school. I miss it. This is very hard work, but I have got used to it now,” Said Ali, who is 11, told the BBC. He dropped out of sixth grade last year.

Their father lost his job when the economy collapsed and has now gone to Iran to find work. Their mother, Lila, begs on the streets.

“I feel awful that my young children are working. This is their time to study and be something. But life is hard for us. I am struggling to find work, and they have to provide for the family,” Lila told the BBC.

Some 84% of Afghanistan’s 5.1 million households are having to borrow to pay for food, the UNDP report says.

Earlier signs of recovery, such as a rise in exports, an expected increase in fiscal revenue, and a reduction in inflation – have been fuelled by international aid amounting to $3.7bn in 2022, according to the UNDP.

UNDP simulations now suggest that if aid were to drop by 30%, gross domestic product (GDP) could contract by 0.4% in 2023 and the inflation rate might spike to about 10% in 2024.

By that time, per capita incomes could decline to a projected $306, compared with $512 in 2020.

Afghan economic hopes threatened by Taliban – UN
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IOM: Two-Thirds of Afghanistan will Need Urgent Aid In 2023

The UN previously reported that 28 million people in Afghanistan need relief, of whom six million are at risk of famine.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in a report that two-thirds of Afghanistan’s population will require urgent humanitarian assistance in 2023.

IOM seeks to mobilize US$ 450 million to address the humanitarian and recovery needs of over 7.3 million people in Afghanistan.

“Through this appeal, IOM seeks to mobilize US$ 450 million to address the humanitarian and recovery needs of over 7.3 million people in Afghanistan, including internally displaced persons (IDPs), cross-border returnees, and host communities,” IOM’s report reads.

Meanwhile, several Afghan citizens who are facing economic challenges asked the humanitarian organizations to increase the humanitarian aid to Afghanistan.

“We ask that employment opportunities be provided so that people have access to food forever,” said Ghulam Ali, the sole breadwinner of a family of 12 members.

“Humanitarian aid that was provided by relief organizations in Afghanistan did not have any economic effectiveness,” said Abdul Nasir Reshtia, an economist.

The Ministry of Economy emphasized need for the continuation of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan.

“Afghanistan currently requires both humanitarian aid and development and exploration aid, and assistance should be provided in the areas of agriculture, the launch of macro-economic projects, and energy,” said Abdul Latif Nazari, deputy of the Ministry of Economy.

The UN previously reported that 28 million people in Afghanistan need relief, of whom six million are at risk of famine.

IOM: Two-Thirds of Afghanistan will Need Urgent Aid In 2023
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UN Chief to Host Meeting on Afghanistan

This comes as the UN warned earlier that it would be forced to pull out of Afghanistan if its female workers were not allowed to work.

UN Dep. Secretary-General Amina Mohammed speaking at an academic event in the US said the UN plans to arrange a conference with various envoys to discuss granting recognition to the Islamic Emirate.

“And out of that, we hope that we’ll find those baby steps to put us back on the pathway to recognition [of the Taliban], a principled recognition,” Mohammed said.

“Is it possible? I don’t know. [But] that discussion has to happen. The Taliban clearly want recognition, and that’s the leverage we have,” said the deputy secretary general.

Mohammed said that the engagement with the acting government would help to hold them accountable for their actions.

“We cannot allow that they continue to get worse, which is what happens when you don’t engage,” she said.

This comes as the former US special envoy for Afghanistan’s reconciliation, Zalmay Khalilzad, also commented regarding the meeting and proposed “four measures”:

  •  Full implementation of the Doha Agreement should be embraced as the common goal.
  •  A roadmap for implementation, considering the current conditions in Afghanistan, is needed
  • To develop the road map, the Secretary-General and the Envoys should have a session with the Taliban during their deliberations.
  • As a follow-up to the meeting, the Secretary-General should appoint a personal Envoy to work with Afghans and the relevant internationals in developing and implementing the roadmap.

According to Khalilzad, there has been unanimity among “Taliban leaders in support of the agreement; the UNSC unanimously endorsed the agreement as a significant step (Resolution 2513).”

Khalilzad said that the majority of former Afghan govt figures also “embrace the agreement as the best framework for dealing with Afghanistan’s challenges.”

“Possibly the UN will stay in Afghanistan and this doesn’t mean recognition of the interim government. The meeting is in Doha because the ambassador of some of the countries for Afghanistan are based in Doha,” said Toreq Farhadi, political analyst.

The Islamic Emirate also welcomed the convening of the meeting by the UN, saying that they hope a reasonable path will be laid out for recognition.

“They should assess the issue of Afghanistan. They should analyze it in a better way. They should have a discussion about the problems of Afghanistan and its people,” said Zabiullah Mujahid, Islamic Emirate’s spokesman.

This comes as the UN warned earlier that it would be forced to pull out of Afghanistan if its female workers were not allowed to work.

UN Chief to Host Meeting on Afghanistan
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Nearly 17,000 Female Staff Still ‘Active’ and ‘Getting Paid’: UNDP

The report said that there have been several improvements recently including security conditions, and “corruption has reportedly fallen.”

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) said that 17,000 female staff members are not leaving the work force and they are working from home, and they will continue to be UN staff.

The UNDP released a report on Afghanistan Socio-Economic Outlook 2023.

The report reads that when coupled with a population increase of more than 2 percent, average real per capita income of ordinary Afghans by the end of 2022 was estimated to have declined by 28 percent from the 2020 level.

The report said that there have been several improvements recently including security conditions, and “corruption has reportedly fallen.”

The head of the UNDP in Afghanistan, Abdullah Dardari, held a press conference late Tuesday to brief the media about the organization’s activities in Afghanistan.

“17,000 staff — female staff … they are not leaving the work force. For now they are working from home and they will continue to be UN staff and they will continue to be paid and they will continue to be very active,” he said.

The study, “Afghanistan Socio-Economic Outlook 2023,” released today in Kabul by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), said Afghanistan’s economic output collapsed by 20.7 percent following the Taliban takeover in 2021.

This unparalleled shock has kept Afghanistan among the poorest countries in the world.

“We believe it is also time to focus on more sustainable projects especially banking, private sector, unemployment to help the Afghan people recover from this type of situation,” said the deputy ambassador to Turkey in Kabul, who attended the UNDP event.

The report said that despite tentative signs of recovery, such as a relatively stable exchange rate, an increase in exports, growing demand for labor, and muted inflation, GDP is estimated to have further declined by 3.6 percent in 2022.

Nearly 17,000 Female Staff Still ‘Active’ and ‘Getting Paid’: UNDP
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UN says leaving Afghanistan would be ‘heartbreaking’

By MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN

Associated Press

April 18, 2023

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations is ready to take the “heartbreaking” decision to pull out of Afghanistan in May if it can’t persuade the Taliban to let local women work for the organization, the head of the U.N. Development Program said.

U.N. officials are negotiating with the Afghan government in the hope that it will make exceptions to an edict this month barring local women from U.N. work, UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner told The Associated Press.

“It is fair to say that where we are right now is the entire United Nations system having to take a step back and reevaluating its ability to operate there,” Steiner said. “But it’s not about negotiating fundamental principles, human rights.”

The UNDP said Tuesday that it “reaffirms its long-standing commitment to stay and deliver for the people of Afghanistan.” Secretary-General António Guterres’ spokesman, Stéphane Dujarric, said that the United Nations continues “to push back on this counterproductive, to say the least, edict by the authorities.”

The Taliban have allowed Afghan women to engage in some work, Steiner said, and a U.N. report released Tuesday shows that the country desperately needs more women working, with its economy flailing.

The Taliban takeover has been accompanied by some very modest signs of economic recovery. There has been some increase in exports, some exchange rate stabilization and less inflation. But gross domestic product, the sum of all goods and services produced within Afghanistan’s borders, is expected to be outstripped by population growth, meaning that per capita income will decline from $359 in 2022 to $345 in 2024, the report says.

Some of those economic problems are due to Taliban policies keeping most women out of the workplace, Steiner said. Those economic problems mean more need in the country, but the U.N. has decided that human rights are non-negotiable and it will reduce its presence in May if the Taliban do not relent.

“I think there is no other way of putting it than heartbreaking,” Steiner said in Monday’s interview. “I mean, if I were to imagine the U.N. family not being in Afghanistan today, I have before me these images of millions of young girls, young boys, fathers, mothers, who essentially will not have enough to eat.”

A source of faint optimism is the Taliban’s allowing women to work in specific circumstances in health, education and some small businesses.

“In one sense, the de facto authorities have enabled the U.N. to roll out a significant humanitarian and also emergency development assistance set of activities,” Steiner said. “But they also continuously are shifting the goalposts, issuing new edicts.”

Despite initial promises of a more moderate rule than during their previous stint in power in the 1990s, the Taliban have imposed harsh measures since taking over the country in 2021 as U.S. and NATO forces were pulling out of Afghanistan after two decades of war.

A spokesman for the Afghan Economy Ministry, Abdul Rahman Habib, told the AP that international banking restrictions, the halt in humanitarian assistance and climate change explain the country’s poverty rate and poor economy.

However, he cited lower inflation and dependence on imports, improved regional trade and business relations, and the eradication of poppy cultivation as signs of economic progress and good governance.

“Our future plans and priorities are developing the agricultural and industrial sectors as well as mining extraction, supporting domestic business and domestic products, more focus on exports, attracting domestic and foreign investors, creating special economic zones and much more,” Habib said.

This month the Taliban took a step further in the restrictive measures they have imposed on women and said that female Afghan staffers employed with the U.N. mission can no longer report for work.

“This is a very fundamental moment that we’re approaching,” Steiner said. “And obviously our hope and expectation is that there will be some common sense prevailing.”

Aid agencies have been providing food, education and health care support to Afghans since the Taliban takeover and the economic collapse that followed it. No country has recognized the Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan, and the country’s seat at the U.N. is held by the former government of President Ashraf Ghani.

The 3,300 Afghans employed by the U.N. — 2,700 men and 600 women — have stayed home since April 12 but continue to work and will be paid, Dujarric has said. The U.N.’s 600 international staff, including 200 women, is not affected by the Taliban ban.

“We are reviewing how we can do our work and how we can do it while respecting international human rights law,” he said Tuesday. “We are doing everything we can to see how we can continue to do that.”

Associated Press writer Rahim Faiez contributed from Islamabad.

UN says leaving Afghanistan would be ‘heartbreaking’
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