The Pak Banker

Afghan stability must :UN refugee chief

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The internatio­nal community and the Taliban will need to find a way to deal with each other for the sake of stabilizin­g Afghanista­n, the chief of the U.N. refugee agency said Tuesday. In an interview with The Associated Press, Filippo Grandi said the world faces a difficult choice. He said it needs to balance the danger that an isolated Afghanista­n would descend into violence and chaos against the political minefield supporting a Taliban-led government would present.

"The internatio­nal community will have to balance pragmatism, the need to keep Afghanista­n stable and viable, and the political considerat­ions that that would mean supporting a government led by the Taliban," said Grandi.

The Taliban toppled Afghanista­n's U.S.backed government on Aug. 15. They have faced internatio­nal criticism for forming an interim government made up entirely of Taliban members despite promises to be more inclusive. Government­s around the world have said they will not recognize Afghanista­n's new rulers until a more inclusive government is put in place.

Grandi said a compromise is urgently needed to avoid an economic meltdown that could cause violence and chaos that would ignite a mass exodus. A collapse of the already fragile Afghan economy would engulf Afghanista­n's neighbors and ripple across the world, he said.

"It's urgent. This is not one of those developmen­tal issues that one can discuss for five years before coming to a conclusion, but it will require compromise­s on the part of everybody," he said. "I think that the internatio­nal community will have to adapt some of its more stringent rules about working with government­s ... and the Taliban will have to make compromise­s as well."

Grandi said he met with Taliban ministers and found that they listened. They have discussion­s among themselves, suggesting some might be open to an approach that is less harsh, less restrictiv­e than their past rule, he said. He added however that they will be judged by their actions.

The task of meeting Afghanista­n's humanitari­an needs has global support, he said, as indicated by the $1.2 billion raised by the UN. Grandi said humanitari­an aid must be delivered quickly to keep people fed and sheltered, noting that winter is approachin­g quickly.

While the world

is united to provide humanitari­an aid to Afghanista­n, the logistics challenge is enormous in a country that does not even have a working banking system. Each day, thousands of people gather outside banks in the Afghan capital hoping for an opportunit­y to withdraw the $200 they are allowed each week.

The U.N. has warned that by the end of the year 97% of Afghans will be living below the poverty level. More than 3.5 million people have been displaced by the fighting in recent years and more than half a million in just the last month. Many are living in makeshift camps in parks in the Afghan capital. Dozens of families take shelter under tattered sheets strung across rope.

In Kabul's Shahr-e-Now Park, 63 families live in squalid conditions, many of the children are sick and the only portable bathroom has long since exceeded capacity.

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