Taliban delegation begins talks in Oslo Al Jazeera 20220123
Al
Jazeera has learned that the Afghan group will be pushed on women’s rights in
return for access to frozen funds.
A Taliban delegation led by acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi has started three days of talks in Oslo with Western government officials and Afghan civil society representatives.
Starting
on Sunday, the closed-door meetings in the Norwegian capital will see Taliban
representatives meeting with women’s rights activists and human rights
defenders from Afghanistan and from the Afghan diaspora.
The
delegation will be pushed on promises
to uphold human rights in return for access
to billions of dollars in frozen humanitarian aid, Al Jazeera has learned.
“The leverage the West has on the Taliban is nearly $10bn
of Afghan money that is held predominantly in the United States,” Al
Jazeera’s Osama Bin Javaid, reporting from Doha, said.
“Amir
Khan Muttaqi is going to be trying to get some of
that money back to pay civil servants’ salaries and to make sure that
there is enough food in the country because the humanitarian
situation has been getting quite desperate,” he said.
“The
other aspect of this obviously is the promises that the Taliban has made when
it came to power on women’s rights, girls education, civil liberties, and that
is something the Taliban has yet to deliver,” he added.
Obaidullah
Baheer, a lecturer at the American University of Afghanistan, told Al Jazeera
from the Afghan capital Kabul that just getting the Taliban to sit down and
talk is progress.
“The
reality is that the Taliban is new to the governance and there is an
opportunity to mould them into something better,” he said.
“I know
they have been rigid in some aspects, but with the right amount of
international pressure and the right kind of activism within Afghanistan, the
Taliban can be pushed towards specific actions.”
In their
first visit to Europe since returning to power in August, the Taliban will meet Norwegian officials as well as
representatives of the US, France, the UK, Germany, Italy and the European
Union.
“In
Norway, we have a meeting with the US and also with the European Union on matters of mutual interest. And one part of our
meetings would be with our Afghan diaspora who are outside the country,
especially in Europe,” said Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman.
“Their ideas, consultations and plans will be heard. This
means that meetings for mutual understanding will continue between Afghans.”
Speaking
to Al Jazeera from Turkey’s Istanbul, Mariam Atahi, an Afghan journalist and
women’s rights activist, urged the Taliban to release three women she said had
been abducted by the group while protesting for their right to education.
“If they want to have the recognition, if they want to
govern Afghanistan, they have to recognise the human rights, the
rights to education, the rights to political participation,” she said.
Taliban
officials, however, have denied beating and arresting women’s rights activists.
The
Afghan group were toppled in a US-led invasion in 2001 but stormed back to
power in August as international troops began their final withdrawal.
No
country has yet recognised the Taliban government, and Norwegian Foreign
Minister Anniken Huitfeldt stressed that the talks
would “not represent a legitimisation or recognition of the Taliban”.
“But we
must talk to the de facto authorities in the country. We cannot allow the
political situation to lead to an even worse humanitarian disaster,” Huitfeldt
said.
The
humanitarian situation in Afghanistan has deteriorated drastically since
August.
International aid,
which financed about 80 percent of the Afghan budget, came to
a sudden halt and the US has frozen $9.5bn in
assets belonging to the Afghan central bank.
Unemployment
has skyrocketed and civil servants’ salaries have not
been paid for months in a country, already ravaged by several severe
droughts.
Hunger now threatens 23 million Afghans, or 55
percent of the population, according to the United Nations, which says it needs $4.4bn from donor countries this year to address
the humanitarian crisis.
“It would
be a mistake to submit the people of Afghanistan to a collective punishment
just because the de facto authorities are not behaving properly”, UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres reiterated on Friday.
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