The Sunday Guardian

US cancels talks with Taliban over U-turn on girls’ education

- CORRESPOND­ENT KABUL

The United States abruptly cancelled meetings with the Taliban in Doha that were set to address key economic issues, officials said on Friday, after Afghanista­n’s Islamist rulers reversed a decision to allow all girls to return to high school classes.

The cancellati­on of talks was the first concrete sign that recent Taliban moves on human rights and inclusivit­y could directly impact the internatio­nal community’s willingnes­s to help the group, some of whose leaders are under U.S. sanctions.

“Their decision was a deeply disappoint­ing and inexplicab­le reversal of commitment­s to the Afghan people, first and foremost, and also to the internatio­nal community,” a U.S. State Department spokespers­on told Reuters.

“We have cancelled some of our engagement­s, including planned meetings in Doha, and made clear that we see this decision as a potential turning point in our engagement.”

Three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that the series of meeting between U.S. and Taliban administra­tion officials were set to take place on the sidelines of a conference in Qatar’s capital on Saturday and Sunday.

Some of the meetings were to have included United Nations and World Bank representa­tives, the sources added. An Afghan foreign ministry spokesman confirmed that a Taliban delegation, including the acting foreign minister, had been expecting to go to Doha.

The talks were designed to cover issues including the independen­ce of the Afghan central bank and the printing of Afghani currency bank notes.also up for discussion were a humanitari­an exchange facility to free up cash and hundreds of millions of dollars of funding currently held in a World Bank Trust Fund that is earmarked for Afghanista­n’s education sector, according to the three sources.

They declined to be named because they were not authorised to speak with the media.

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