Talks with Indian representative in Moscow Format were positive: Muttaqi

Kabul, Nov 14 (FN Agency) The Afghan Taliban does not want conflict with any country, including India, and the conversation with the representative from New Delhi during the Moscow Format last month was “positive”, Afghanistan’s acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi has said. In an interview with BBC News Urdu, and reported by Dawn, Muttaqi, to a question about relations with New Delhi, said that Afghanistan did not want conflict with any country, including India. “We do not want Afghanistan to have a conflict with any other country or to have challenges arise that could affect our nation, therefore, we will continue to work on this issue,” Muttaqi said. Asked whether there was a reaction from China or Pakistan on Afghanistan’s close ties with India, he referred to the recent meetings held in Moscow. “When we participated in the Moscow conference, the representatives of India, Pakistan and several other countries were also present. We had a positive conversation and will hopefully not oppose any country,” he said. On October 20, on the sidelines of the Moscow Format talks in the Russian capital, a Taliban delegation led by Maulvi Abdul Salam Hanafi, Deputy Prime Minister of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, met with JP Singh, Joint Secretary in India’s Ministry of External Affairs, in India’s first high-level contact with the Taliban regime in Kabul.

Separately, Muttaqi, during a meeting with Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan in Islamabad on Friday, urged the Pakistani leadership to allow Indian trucks carrying wheat into Afghanistan. Imran Khan gave the go-ahead. Imran told the delegation led by Muttaqi that Islamabad would “favourably consider” the request by the Afghan Taliban to allow trucks carrying Indian wheat through Pakistan “on exceptional basis”. In his interview to BBC Urdu, Muttaqi also said that the Afghan Taliban are mediating between Pakistan and the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) but no agreement has been reached so far. Muttaqi said the Afghan Taliban were acting as mediators on the desire of both the parties in Pakistan. Muttaqi said the two sides had not yet reached an agreement, but the process has had a “good” start, leading to the announcement of a month-long ceasefire. Muttaqi hoped that relations between the government and the TTP would improve. He told the BBC journalists, in what the publication said was his first interview with a female journalist, that the Daesh (the terrorist Islamic State group) was a threat to Afghanistan. He claimed that the Taliban government “has eliminated it from a major part of the country”. “Isolated incidents can take place anywhere in the world. Previously, 70 per cent of Afghanistan was under the control of the Islamic Emirate. Now, the Taliban have purged these areas of the presence of Daesh,” he claimed, adding that they were present in areas ruled by the former Kabul government.

After the Taliban took over, Daesh started surfacing in these areas but the Taliban government took effective measures to “control” them and confine them to certain pockets, he said. “Isolated (terrorist) incidents occur at some places such as mosques, which can also take place anywhere in the world,” he said. The Afghan official also sought to dispel the impression that women were being excluded from different fields. “Women have 100 per cent inclusion in the health sector. They are also teaching in the education sector. […] They are working in each and every one of those sectors where they are required,” he claimed. “We have no such policy to deny women of their rights in any field,” he remarked. He said that the Taliban government had not fired any female official who had worked under the previous government. “Their salaries as well as opportunities for education and employment were also not affected,” he said. However, Muttaqi conceded that educational institutions in some areas of Afghanistan remain closed, citing the Covid-19 pandemic as the reason. “Educational institutes are closed in no province. Educational institutes are open across the country,” he said, adding that schools had been divided into three categories. “All of the boys’ schools throughout the country are open while girl’s schools are open till class six,” he said. The Afghan minister stated that higher education institutes were open in some provinces, but not all. So far, 75 percent of schools have been opened, he said, adding that officials were continuously making progress in this regard. On the issue of forming an inclusive government, Muttaqi said the Taliban government had “fulfilled the international community’s demand for an inclusive government”, which represented all stakeholders in Afghan society.

Asked what the group’s future course of action would be if the world did not recognise the Taliban, he said that the group was moving forward in its relations with the world and hoped that those ties would strengthen in the future. He claimed that since the Afghan government consisted of representation from all areas and ethnicities, the world should recognise it. “The incumbent Afghan government comprises staff and workers from the previous set-up that come up to approximately 500,000 people. If the world had recognised the previous government as an inclusive government, then why don’t they do the same with us,” he asked. “If they mean a cabinet representing all areas, then we have a minister from Panjshir. People from Badakhshan, Faryab, Kandahar, Nangahar and Kabul are also present [in the cabinet]. Therefore, every country has its own definition of an inclusive government,” he said. He said that the Taliban will continue to make efforts to make the government even more inclusive and grant the people their rights.