Taliban, Western officials meet in Oslo to discuss Afghanistan Al Jazeera 20220124
After ‘a
positive icebreaking meeting’ with Afghan
activists, the group holds talks with Western
officials.
Taliban and Western diplomats are holding a meeting outside Norway’s capital Oslo for talks focused on Afghanistan’s humanitarian crisis, which has escalated drastically since last August when the Taliban stormed back to power 20 years after being toppled in a US-led invasion.
The
closed-door discussions with representatives of the
United States, France, Britain, Germany, Italy, the European Union and Norway
are being held on Monday at the Soria Moria Hotel, on a snowy hilltop outside
Oslo.
On
Sunday, during
the first day of the three-day talks, the Taliban met with Afghan civil society members,
including women activists and journalists, for talks on human rights.
Women’s
rights activist Jamila Afghani, who attended Sunday’s talks, told the AFP news
agency “it was a positive icebreaking meeting”.
The
Taliban “displayed goodwill … Let’s see what their
actions will be, based on their words”, she said.
The 15 members of the all-male delegation arrived on
Saturday on board a plane chartered by the Norwegian government.
Unfreeze assets
The
Taliban has been demanding that its assets of nearly
$10bn held by the US be released and Afghanistan be linked to global trade.
International
aid came to a halt following the Taliban’s return to power on August 15,
worsening the plight of millions of people already suffering from hunger after
severe droughts.
The freezing of Afghan central bank assets worth billions of dollars by
the US and suspension of funds by international
financial institutions have triggered a banking crisis and caused a near
collapse of the Afghan economy.
“We are
requesting them to unfreeze Afghan assets and not punish ordinary Afghans
because of the political discourse,” Taliban
delegate Shafiullah Azam told The Associated Press news agency, speaking
at the end of the first day of talks.
“Because
of the starvation, because of the deadly winter, I think it’s time for the
international community to support Afghans, not punish them because of their
political disputes.”
He also
said the meetings with Western officials were “a
step to legitimise (the) Afghan government”, adding that “this type of invitation and communication will help
(the) European community, (the) US or many other countries to erase the wrong
picture of the Afghan government”.
However, Norwegian Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt
earlier stressed that the talks were “not a
legitimation or recognition of the Taliban”.
A US
delegation, led by Special Representative for
Afghanistan Tom West, plans to discuss “the
formation of a representative political system; responses to the urgent
humanitarian and economic crises; security and
counterterrorism concerns; and human rights, especially
education for girls and women”, according to a statement released by the
US State Department.
Protest against Taliban
On
Sunday, 200 protesters gathered on an icy square in front of the Norwegian
foreign ministry in Oslo to condemn the meetings with the Taliban, which have
not received diplomatic recognition from any foreign government.
“The
Taliban has not changed as some in the international community like to say,”
said Ahman Yasir, a Norwegian Afghan living in Norway for about 20 years. “They are as brutal as they were in 2001 and before.”
Fawzia
Koofi, former deputy speaker of Afghanistan’s parliament who is also involved
in negotiations with the Taliban, told Al Jazeera that the current talks only
help consolidate the group’s power.
“In the
situation where there is a lot of disunity and the political community of
Afghanistan has not taken steps to unite and have a common position at the
negotiation table, the talks will further weaken our position and further boost
that of the Taliban,” she said.
Meanwhile,
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a tweet: “All Afghans need to work
together for better political, economic and security outcomes.
“The
participants … recognised that understanding and joint cooperation are the only
solutions.”
Since
sweeping to power in mid-August, the Taliban have imposed widespread
restrictions, many of them directed at women, many of whom have been banned
from certain jobs outside the health and education fields.
High
school girls have been confined to their homes as schools have yet to be
opened. Last week, the Taliban promised all girls will be able to return to
school by end of March.
The
Taliban have, however, stopped short of imposing a burqa ban, which was
compulsory when they previously ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s.
The
Taliban have been accused of targeting rights groups as well as journalists, in
many cases detaining them.
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