Toronto Star

Trudeau joins G20 leaders in pressing Taliban

World leaders pressure Afghan rulers to respect human rights, aid access

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OTTAWA—Canada joined its G20 allies in pushing Afghanista­n’s new Taliban rulers to allow humanitari­an aid to better reach the country’s suffering people.

During a virtual summit, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his fellow G20 leaders discussed the crisis in Afghanista­n created by the Taliban rout of Kabul’s Western-backed government. The European Union emerged from the summit Tuesday announcing a support package of $1.4 billion, about two-thirds of which was new money.

There was no sign of any renewed Canadian financial commitment following Canada’s August announceme­nt of an additional $50 million in humanitari­an assistance to internatio­nal organizati­ons helping Afghanista­n.

The financial assistance being offered by Canada and its allies is channelled through internatio­nal organizati­ons such as the United Nations and the World Bank, and has never been sent directly to Afghan government­s of any stripe.

A senior government official said Trudeau used his speaking time at the G20 meeting to push the resettleme­nt of Afghan refugees, noting that Canada had doubled its commitment to accept 40,000 asylum seekers.

The official provided details of the Trudeau’s participat­ion at the meeting on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record.

Trudeau joined other leaders in pressing the Taliban to protect the fundamenta­l rights of all Afghans, especially women.

The meeting marked one of the first multilater­al gatherings since the August collapse of Afghanista­n following the withdrawal of American military forces, which ended two decades of Western military and political engagement with the country.

Afghanista­n’s economy is now on the verge of collapse and its population is facing dire food shortages.

Even before the country fell to the Taliban, Afghanista­n was heavily reliant on foreign spending assistance.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi hosted the Tuesday meeting because his country currently holds the chair of the G20. The United States, China and Russia are among the group members, and their leaders also attended the virtual summit.

 ?? FILIPPO ATTILI AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A senior Canadian government official said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used his speaking time at the G20 meeting Tuesday to push for the resettleme­nt of Afghan refugees, noting that Canada had doubled its commitment to accept 40,000 asylum seekers.
FILIPPO ATTILI AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A senior Canadian government official said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used his speaking time at the G20 meeting Tuesday to push for the resettleme­nt of Afghan refugees, noting that Canada had doubled its commitment to accept 40,000 asylum seekers.

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