Arab News

Taliban set to form ‘all-inclusive’ Afghan government ‘within 2 weeks’

Group leaders complete talks on formation of new administra­tion

- Shershah Nawabi Kabul

The Taliban on Wednesday said the group’s leaders had concluded talks on the formation of an “all-inclusive,” wide-ranging Afghan government and hoped to reveal the new administra­tion within two weeks.

The announceme­nt follows the Taliban’s toppling of the Westernbac­ked Kabul administra­tion earlier this month and comes just 48 hours after the last US military flight left the Afghan capital on Monday.

Bilal Karimi, the Taliban’s deputy spokesman in Kabul, told Arab News: “In the near future, the nation will witness the formation of a new government and Cabinet ... the discussion­s for forming a new government have finished.”

It follows three days of talks led by the Taliban’s supreme leader Mullah Haibatulla­h Akhundzada in Kandahar, Afghanista­n’s second-largest city and the group’s stronghold.

“We hope that the new government will be formed possibly this week or within the next week,” Karimi added.

He gave no further details but said the future government would be a “wide-ranging one with the presence of all parties in the new political system of Afghanista­n.”

Since returning to power on Aug. 15, the Taliban have repeatedly vowed to form a more moderate government under “the framework of Islamic law,” to uphold women’s rights, grant amnesty to opponents, and ensure Afghan territory will not be used as a base for attacks against any other country.

The Taliban, on Tuesday, took full control of Kabul airport, declaring Afghanista­n a “free and sovereign” nation after the US ended its 20 years of occupation, cementing the group’s return to power after their ouster in 2001.

Speaking to reporters at Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport in Kabul, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid hailed Washington’s withdrawal as an “historic moment” while pledging to bring security to the war-torn country and “protect our freedom, independen­ce, and Islamic values.”

But many Afghans remain skeptical, and tens of thousands have fled the country in the past two weeks, amid fears that the Taliban will reinstate their hardline form

of governance as they did during their previous rule from 1996 to 2001, before being toppled in an American-led invasion.

Abdullah Qaderi, a Kabul-based political analyst, told Arab News: “Formation of a new inclusive government in the country is an urgent need, as we are the world’s first nation that has had no government for almost two weeks. Continuati­on of this process could facilitate internal wars in the country.”

Shahram Rahmani, a civil rights activist, told Arab News: “We hope that this government will be inclusive, and all parties and political figures will take part in it. We believe that if the government is not inclusive, its presence will be meaningles­s to all sides.”

The Taliban also face the urgent task of bolstering Afghanista­n’s economy with internatio­nal donors withholdin­g funds ever since the group recaptured the nation of 38 million people that for two decades had survived on billions of dollars in foreign aid.

Banks remain closed, and residents have reported a sharp spike in prices of essential goods throughout the capital and other areas.

Sanaullah Zazai, 35, told Arab News: “We need food, water, and also security. We urge the Islamic Emirate leadership to form their government as soon as possible; the people are facing challenges.”

 ?? AFP ?? Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, center, speaks to the media at the airport in Kabul on Wednesday, after the US pulled all its troops out of the country.
AFP Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, center, speaks to the media at the airport in Kabul on Wednesday, after the US pulled all its troops out of the country.

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