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The Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar (left) and Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi, during a meeting in Tianjin, China, in July 2021. Photograph: Li Ran/AP |
China has promised to keep its embassy in Kabul open and “beef up” relations, the Taliban have said, as Afghanistan’s new rulers worked on preparing their new government and winning international recognition, The Guardian reports.
According to the report, a spokesman for
the Islamist militia, Suhail Shaheen, said on Friday a senior member of the
Taliban’s political office in Qatar had been told by China’s deputy foreign
minister that Beijing also aimed to increase humanitarian assistance.
While the west has mostly adopted a wait-and-see approach and demanded evidence, as the Taliban move from insurgency to government, of more inclusive government and respect for human rights, China has said it seeks “friendly and cooperative” relations – although it, too, has yet to formally recognise the new regime, the report stated and submits further that analysts have said a stable and cooperative administration in Kabul could pave the way for major Chinese infrastructural and other investment in Afghanistan, possibly including in the war-ravaged country’s big copper and lithium
mines.The following also formed part of the
report:
Amid mounting international speculation about the shape of the new government, Taliban sources repeated on Friday that the movement’s co-founder, Mullah Baradar, would head the new cabinet, expected to be unveiled on Saturday.
Baradar, who heads the Taliban’s political office, will be joined by Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob – the son of the late Taliban co-founder Mullah Omar – and Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai in senior positions in the government, three sources said.
“All the
top leaders have arrived in Kabul, where preparations are in final stages to
announce the new government,” one official told Reuters. Another said
Haibatullah Akhunzada, the Taliban’s supreme religious leader, would focus on
religious matters.
The government would comprise 25 ministries, with a consultative council, or shura, of 12 Muslim scholars, sources said, and a loya jirga, or grand assembly, bringing together elders and other representatives planned within six to eight months.
The
Taliban have promised to govern more moderately than during their previous
spell in power between 1996 and 2001, when they were ousted by US-led forces in
the aftermath of the 11 September attacks. However, many Afghans, especially
women, are deeply sceptical and fear a rollback of rights gained over the past
two decades.
Video
shared on social media on Thursday appeared to show a Taliban victory parade,
reportedly in Kandahar, featuring seized weaponry, military equipment and
explosives but also members of the group’s suicide bomb squad.
A small
group of Afghan women protested near the presidential palace in Kabul on
Friday, demanding equal rights. Facing looming economic collapse and with the
UN warning of a humanitarian disaster, thousands of people continued to try to
flee the country overland.
Elsewhere,
signs of international engagement gathered pace, with the United Nations
restarting humanitarian flights to parts of the country, linking the Pakistani
capital, Islamabad, with Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan and Kandahar in
the south.
Afghanistan’s
largest carrier, Ariana Afghan Airlines, also said it would resume domestic
flights, beginning with a plane from Mazar-i-Sharif to Kabul, later on Friday
after getting a “green light” from the Taliban and aviation authorities.
Qatar’s
foreign minister said the Gulf state was working with the Taliban to reopen
Kabul’s airport for international traffic as soon as possible, while Turkey
said it was also evaluating proposals from the Taliban and others for a role in
running the airport.
Western
Union and MoneyGram both said they were resuming money transfers, which many
Afghans rely on from relatives abroad to survive.
Italy’s
foreign minister was due to visit Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Qatar and Pakistan
from Friday to assist Afghan refugees, while his British counterpart was to
head to the region next week, the Italian and UK governments said.
Meanwhile
the Taliban, who seized Kabul on 15 August after sweeping across most of the
country, have continued to face stiff resistance in the
Panjshir valley north of the capital, where there have been reports
of heavy fighting and casualties.
Several
thousand fighters from regional militias and remnants of the government’s armed
and special forces have massed in the rugged valley under the leadership of
Ahmad Massoud, the son of the former Mujahideen commander Ahmad Shah Massoud.
However, the report concludes that efforts
to negotiate a settlement appear to have broken down, with each side blaming
the other for the failure and claiming to have inflicted heavy losses. Panjshir
valley was a resistance stronghold for decades, first against the Soviets in
the 1980s, then against the Taliban
in the 1990s.
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