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News ID: 95375
Publish Date : 12 October 2021 - 21:45

Tehran to Host Afghan Talks

TEHRAN - Director General of the South Asian affairs department at the Iranian foreign ministry Rasoul Mousavi says Tehran will soon host a meeting of top diplomats from Afghanistan’s neighboring states, weeks after the Taliban took over the South Asian country and formed a new interim government in Kabul.
“There are considerable diplomatic activities to understand the developments in Afghanistan and have an influence on its future. Different countries pursue their various diplomatic mechanisms,” Mousavi said in a post on his Twitter account.
“Afghanistan’s future is in regional cooperation with its neighbors. A meeting of the foreign ministers of Afghanistan’s neighbors will be held in Tehran soon.”
On September 8, Pakistan hosted a virtual conference that brought together the foreign ministers of Afghanistan’s six neighboring states, including China, Iran, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, to discuss Afghan strategy.
An opening statement at the summit stressed that the neighbors had agreed on closer cooperation to avert a looming humanitarian disaster in Afghanistan.
The neighbors, it added, would require a coordinated approach to cope with challenges stemming from the government change in Kabul after U.S.-led troops left.
The statement further said the challenges included border security and preventing Afghan soil from being used as a base for terrorism and a possible influx of refugees.
The U.S. military led the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 in what it proclaimed was a war on terror meant to eradicate the Taliban.
Afghanistan Faces ‘Make-or-Break Moment’
Also on Monday, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned that Afghanistan is facing “a make-or-break moment,” urging the world to prevent the country’s economy from collapsing.
“Respecting international law and principles, we have to find ways to inject liquidity into the economy for the economy not to
collapse. If we do not act and help Afghans weather this storm, and do it soon, not only they but also all the world will pay a heavy price,” he told reporters at UN headquarters in New York.
Afghanistan is currently grappling with a liquidity crisis as assets remain frozen in the U.S. and other countries, and disbursements from international organizations have been put on hold.
“Already before the Taliban takeover in August, Afghanistan’s fragile economy -- which has been kept afloat by foreign aid over the past twenty years -- suffered from the impact of drought and COVID,” Guterres said.
The UN chief further warned of dire consequence of the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan.