Taliban: Denial of UN Seat to Afghanistan Instrument of Pressure
KABUL (Anadolu) – Denying Afghanistan’s interim government approval of its nominee to represent the country at the UN is an “instrument of pressure,” a Taliban official said on Tuesday.
“The new Afghan government, as an accountable authority with sovereignty over entire Afghanistan, which has ensured security for all Afghans has a legitimate right to represent the Afghan people in the UN,” said Abdul Qahar Balkhi, Foreign Ministry spokesman under the Taliban-led interim government.
Denial of such representation at the UN, which is the “legitimate right of Afghan people,” is tantamount to “an instrument of pressure,” he said.
The statement came after the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution on Monday delaying the process of recognizing the Taliban’s nominee, Suhail Shaheen. Shaheen also serves as Taliban spokesman and took part in negotiations with the U.S. for a 2020 deal that ended Washington’s longest war.
“(It) is of no benefit to anyone and is not legally grounded,” he said of the resolution.
The UN decision keeps Ghulam Mohammad Ishaqzai, the UN envoy appointed by the former U.S.-backed administration of Afghanistan, as the country’s representative for the time being.
“Giving Afghanistan’s seat in the UN to an individual with no working relation with Kabul and no authority over any part of Afghan territory is deemed a blatant denial of the Afghan people’s legitimate right,” said Balkhi.
The Taliban, who had previously ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, took power again on August 15 as the U.S. was in the middle of a chaotic troop withdrawal. The group announced the formation of a caretaker government on September 7. Since then, the Taliban have been struggling to contain a deepening economic crisis.
Most of the international forums stopped their aid and assistance to Afghanistan after the Taliban returned to power. Besides, the United States seized nearly $9.5 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central bank. The Taliban have repeatedly called for the release of the assets, but Washington has rebuffed the call, saying the new government in Kabul must “earn” international legitimacy first.
The United Nations says Afghanistan is facing “one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters.”