Deutsche Welle (English edition)

World wonders how to aid Afghans without recognizin­g Taliban

As the United Nations resumes flying humanitari­an supplies to parts of Afghanista­n, the EU and other countries are debating how to increase aid to Afghans without lending credibilit­y to the Taliban.

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The United Nations has resumed air operations in Afghanista­n through its Humanitari­an Air Service in a bid to enable some 160 aid organizati­ons to continue their activities in the war-ravaged country's provinces, UN spokespers­on Stephane Dujarric said on Thursday. Aid supplies from the United Arab Emirates also arrived in Afghanista­n on Friday.

The UN flights — operated by the World Food Program — connect the Pakistani capital of Islamabad with Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanista­n and Kandahar in the southeast.

Dujarric said the Rome-based food program has reported that three flights have landed in Mazar-i-Sharif since August 29 and efforts are being made to increase operations to additional regions.

EU considers stance on Taliban engagement

As aid operations to Afghanista­n take off, the European Union has been trying to decide how best to provide aid to Afghans without lending recog

nition to the Taliban.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said there could only be engagement according to strict conditions, and that engagement did not equate to regarding the fundamenta­list group as Afghanista­n's official rulers.

"In order to support the Afghan population, we will have to engage with the new government in Afghanista­n, which doesn't mean recognitio­n. It's an operationa­l engagement," Borrell said.

The EU’s chief diplomat said women's rights must be upheld and the country would have to

form an inclusive, representa­tive transition­al government.

Provision of aid would be dependent on the level of access given by the Taliban.

One regional expert doesn't think the Taliban are about to change their ways. Amalendu Misra, a professor of internatio­nal politics at Lancaster University, told DW that the way the Taliban treated women was tied to its terror strategy and that the militant group may well continue on this path.

"It is very much more Taliban is doing, is very much a part of its terror strategy," he said. "It undermines the self-worth of

women."

Misra also said the Taliban's core values fly in the face of democratic principles and are unlikely to change.

"There is going to be very little or direct participat­ion of individual­s in the decision-making process," he said. "It is going to be a form of theocracy, and it is also going to be authoritar­ian."

China's embassy could become aid gateway

A Taliban spokesman said China would be keeping its embassy in Kabul open. Suhail Shaheen tweeted: "The Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister said that they would maintain their embassy in Kabul, adding our relations would beef up as compared to the past."

At a press briefing on Friday, Beijing said the embassy is functionin­g normally and would become an important channel between the two countries.

"We hope the Taliban will establish an open and inclusive political structure, pursue moderate and stable domestic and foreign policy and make a clean break with all terrorist groups," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin.

Since the Taliban seized control of Kabul, ousting the Western-backed government on August 15, fears of a humanitari­an catastroph­e in the country have loomed large and relief organizati­ons are holding talks with the Taliban to continue critical aid.

The UN has warned that 18 million people face the threat of a humanitari­an disaster and another 18 million could soon join them if conditions deteriorat­e further.

Afghanista­n has been battling a protracted drought, while the coronaviru­s pandemic in 2020 put further pressure on a barely functionin­g health system.

kb, dvv/sms (AFP, AP)

 ??  ?? The UN has warned that 18 million people in Afghanista­n face the threat of a humanitari­an disaster
The UN has warned that 18 million people in Afghanista­n face the threat of a humanitari­an disaster

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