Italy organises special summit of G20 major economies to discuss Afghanistan’s humanitarian crisis. Meanwhile, Islamabad says Taliban is best positioned to get rid of Daesh terrorist group.
Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi
will host a special summit of the Group of 20 major economies to discuss Afghanistan, as worries grow about a looming
humanitarian disaster following the Taliban’s return to power.
Since the Taliban took over Afghanistan on August 15, the
country –– already struggling with drought and severe poverty
after decades of war –– has seen its economy all but collapse,
raising the spectre of an exodus of refugees.
The video conference on Tuesday, which is due to start at 1 pm (1100
GMT), will focus on aid needs, concerns over security and ways
of guaranteeing safe passage abroad for thousands of
Western-allied Afghans still in the country.
“Providing humanitarian support is urgent for the most
vulnerable groups, especially women and children, with winter
arriving,” said an official with knowledge of the G20 agenda.
The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is due to join
the summit, underlining the central role given to the United
Nations in tackling the crisis – in part because many countries
don’t want to establish direct relations with the Taliban.
READ MORE: UN chief: Liquidity needed to stem Afghanistan humanitarian crisis
Pakistan, Iran not invited
Italy, which holds the rotating presidency of the G20, has
worked hard to set up the meeting in the face of highly
divergent views within the disparate group on how to deal with
Afghanistan after the chaotic US withdrawal from Kabul.
“The main problem is that Western countries want to put
their finger on the way the Taliban run the country, how they
treat women for example, while China and Russia, on the other hand, have a non-interference foreign policy,” said a diplomatic
source close to the matter.
China has publicly demanded that economic sanctions on
Afghanistan be lifted and that billions of dollars in Afghan
international assets be unfrozen and handed back to Kabul. It
was not clear if this would even be discussed on Tuesday.
While US President Joe Biden, Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi and Europe’s G20 leaders were expected to take
part in the meeting, Chinese media reported that President Xi
Jinping would not participate.
It was also not clear if Russian
President Vladimir Putin would dial in.
READ MORE: UNHCR: World must urgently provide aid to Afghanistan
Afghanistan’s neighbours Pakistan and Iran have not been
invited to the virtual call, but Qatar, which has played a key
role as an interlocutor between the Taliban and the West, will
join the discussions, a diplomatic source said.
The virtual summit comes just days after senior US and
Taliban officials met in Qatar for their first face-to-face
meeting since the hardline group retook power.
Tuesday’s meeting comes less than three weeks before the formal G20 leaders summit in Rome on October 30-31, which is due to focus on climate crisis, the global economic recovery, tackling malnutrition and the Covid-19 pandemic.
READ MORE:
Hundreds of Afghans, many eager to flee, throng Kabul passport office
Pakistan’s Khan: Taliban best to get rid of Daesh
Meanwhile, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan warned on Monday that sanctioning the Taliban government would help strengthen Daesh in Afghanistan while the Taliban are best positioned to get rid of the terrorist group.
In an interview with UK-based online news outlet Middle East Eye aired by state-run Pakistan Television, Khan urged the United States to “pull itself together” and not push Afghanistan toward becoming a haven again for terrorists.
“It’s a critical point for understanding that the world must engage with Afghanistan because if it pushes it away, within the Taliban movement, I would imagine there would be hardliners, and so it can easily go back to the Taliban of 20 years ago, and that would be a disaster,” he warned.
“What has the US got to show after that 20 years? A stable Afghanistan, government, which can then take on ISIS,” Khan said, using another name for the Daesh terror group.
“Believe me, the Taliban are the best [ones] to get rid of ISIS.”
READ MORE: Carnage after blast targets Shia mosque in Afghanistan’s Kunduz city
Source: TRTWorld and agencies
Pakistan says Taliban ‘best’ to defeat Daesh as Italy hosts Afghan summit
Source: News Achor Trending
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