The Phnom Penh Post

Taliban thank world for vowing aid, implore US to show ‘heart’

-

THE Taliban on September 14 thanked the world for pledging hundreds of millions of dollars in emergency aid to Afghanista­n, and urged the US to show “heart” to the impoverish­ed country.

A donor conference in Geneva, Switzerlan­d on September 13 ended with pledges of $1.2 billion in aid for Afghanista­n, which was taken over by the hardline Islamist group last month in a lightning offensive that took retreating US troops by surprise.

Afghanista­n, already heavily dependent on aid, is facing an economic crisis, with the new authoritie­s unable to pay salaries and food prices soaring.

Amir Khan Muttaqi, the regime’s acting foreign minister, told a press conference the Taliban would spend donor money wisely and use it to alleviate poverty.

“We thank and welcome the world’s pledge for about one billion dollars in aid and ask them to continue their assistance to Afghanista­n,” Muttaqi said.

“The Islamic Emirate will try its best to deliver this aid to the needy people in a completely transparen­t manner.”

He also asked Washington to show appreciati­on for the Taliban allowing the US military to complete its troop withdrawal and evacuation of more than 120,000 people last month.

Muttaqi said the US “is a big country – they need to have a big heart”.

Afghanista­n, which is also facing a drought, had already received aid from countries such as Pakistan, Qatar and Uzbekistan, he said without giving further details.

He said he had held discussion­s with China’s ambassador on the coronaviru­s vaccine and other humanitari­an causes, with Beijing pledging $15 million that will be available “soon”.

Since the Taliban takeover,

the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund have halted Afghanista­n’s access to funding, while the US has also frozen cash held in its reserves for Kabul.

UN chief Antonio Guterres on September 13 said he believed aid could be used as leverage with the Islamist hardliners to exact improvemen­ts on human rights, amid fears of a return to the brutal rule that characteri­sed the first Taliban regime from 1996 to 2001.

“It is impossible to provide humanitari­an assistance inside Afghanista­n without engaging with the de facto authoritie­s,” the UN secretaryg­eneral told ministers attending the Geneva talks.

“It is very important to engage with the Taliban at the present moment.”

The Taliban have promised a milder form of rule this time around, but have moved swiftly to crush dissent, including firing in the air to disperse recent protests by women calling for the right to

education and work.

UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet said she was “dismayed by the lack of inclusivit­y of the so-called caretaker cabinet, which includes no women and few non-Pashtuns”.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has repeatedly warned that the Taliban would have to earn legitimacy and support, after talks with allies on how to present a united front.

The caretaker cabinet, the top US diplomat said, would be judged “by its actions”.

Meanwhile, Afghans are resorting to selling their household goods to raise money to pay for essentials, and bustling second-hand goods markets have mushroomed in most urban centres.

Ajmal Ahmady, former acting governor of the Afghan central bank, tweeted last week that the country no longer had access to around $9 billion in aid, loans and assets.

On September 14, hundreds

of protesters in the southern city of Kandahar – the Taliban’s spiritual birthplace – protested the new rulers’ plan to evict people from their homes.

The demonstrat­ors were from a neighbourh­ood populated by former Afghan army servicemen – many were widows of servicemen killed in action against the Taliban over the last 20 years, or wives of wounded soldiers.

The residents said they had been ordered to leave by the Taliban but had nowhere to go.

A crowd mainly made up of men and youths, along with some women – many burqaclad – took to the streets despite the Taliban ban on unauthoris­ed protests.

Kandahar’s governor has temporaril­y stayed any eviction until the matter can be discussed with community elders.

Some reporters covering the march said they were harassed and beaten by Taliban guards along the route.

 ?? AFP ?? Taliban authoritie­s have urged the US to show ‘heart’ as Afghanista­n faces an economic crisis.
AFP Taliban authoritie­s have urged the US to show ‘heart’ as Afghanista­n faces an economic crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia