Pakistan hosts US, China, Russia to discuss Afghanistan

block

Al Jazeera :
Pakistan has hosted senior diplomats from the United States, China and Russia in Islamabad to discuss the situation in neighbouring Afghanistan, where a deepening humanitarian crisis has forced many Afghans to migrate to neighbouring countries since the Taliban takeover in August.
Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi was also present in Islamabad but he did not attend the meeting on Thursday, dubbed the “troika plus”.
Amir Khan will meet his Pakistani counterpart later on Thursday. According to Afghanistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi, the Afghan foreign minister will also follow up with the special envoys on Afghanistan.
Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi warned at the opening of the meeting that Afghanistan is “at the brink of economic collapse” and the international community must urgently resume funding frozen by Western donors since the Taliban took power and provide humanitarian assistance.
He said any further economic deterioration would “severely limit” the new Taliban government’s ability to run the country.
“It is, therefore, imperative for the international community to buttress provision of humanitarian assistance on an urgent basis,” he said.
Resuming the flow of international funding “will dovetail into our efforts to regenerate economic activities and move the Afghan economy towards stability and sustainability”, Qureshi said.
Doing so would benefit Western countries also, he said in later comments to state media.
“If you think that you are far, Europe is safe and those areas you imagine will not be affected by terrorism, don’t forget the history,” he said. “We have learned from the history and we don’t want to repeat those mistakes made in the past.”
A Pakistani official told the Dawn newspaper earlier this week, “Troika plus has become an important forum for engagement with Afghan authorities. It will express support for an inclusive government, discuss ways to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan as well as the protection of human rights, particularly women’s rights.”
The United Nations has repeatedly warned that Afghanistan is on the brink of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, with more than half the country facing “acute” food shortages and winter forcing millions to choose between migration and starvation.
The State Department said earlier this week that the new US special envoy for Afghanistan, Thomas West, will attend the meeting and also plans to visit Russia and India.
“Together with our partners, he will continue to make clear the expectations that we have of the Taliban and of any future Afghanistan government,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told a briefing this week.
The meeting will be West’s first trip to the region since taking over from Zalmay Khalilzad, the long-serving diplomat who spearheaded the talks that led to the US withdrawal from Afghanistan.
West, who was in Brussels this week to brief NATO on US engagements with the Taliban, told reporters that the group has “very clearly” voiced their desire to see aid resumed, as well as to normalise international relations and see sanctions relief.
He called for unity from allies on those issues, noting that Washington “can deliver none of these things on our own”.
Meanwhile, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Wang Wenbin, said at a routine briefing this week that “China supports all international efforts that are beneficial towards promoting peace and stability in Afghanistan, and firm up consensus on all sides”.
The last troika meeting was held in Doha on August 11, which was attended by Khalilzad. Another meeting was convened by Russia in Moscow on October 19, but the US did not participate.
Reporting from Islamabad, Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder said with the third troika meeting taking place to discuss Afghanistan, it was clear that the “world is in engaging with the Taliban”.
“It will be important to see what comes out of the meeting because regional powers are concerned about the inclusivity factors, women rights, and a huge humanitarian crisis that is likely to unfold in Afghanistan,” Hyder said.

block