Berliner Boersenzeitung - Taliban PM calls for Muslim nations to recognise Afghan government

EUR -
AED 4.23959
AFN 73.310068
ALL 95.900584
AMD 433.624966
ANG 2.066497
AOA 1058.597338
ARS 1603.777961
AUD 1.671235
AWG 2.077945
AZN 1.964239
BAM 1.956815
BBD 2.319924
BDT 141.333324
BGN 1.97325
BHD 0.435917
BIF 3422.501489
BMD 1.154414
BND 1.483538
BOB 7.959129
BRL 5.954816
BSD 1.151808
BTN 107.290663
BWP 15.802267
BYN 3.41303
BYR 22626.512719
BZD 2.316522
CAD 1.606898
CDF 2650.534376
CHF 0.921326
CLF 0.02681
CLP 1058.597489
CNY 7.948836
CNH 7.94571
COP 4227.994784
CRC 535.9711
CUC 1.154414
CUP 30.591969
CVE 110.322236
CZK 24.510172
DJF 205.108188
DKK 7.472885
DOP 69.625217
DZD 153.609032
EGP 62.602023
ERN 17.316209
ETB 179.858637
FJD 2.60182
FKP 0.872043
GBP 0.872165
GEL 3.099593
GGP 0.872043
GHS 12.66457
GIP 0.872043
GMD 85.426442
GNF 10104.023192
GTQ 8.811571
GYD 241.075071
HKD 9.047661
HNL 30.597079
HRK 7.53723
HTG 151.173846
HUF 385.365873
IDR 19610.029161
ILS 3.619722
IMP 0.872043
INR 106.992811
IQD 1508.982866
IRR 1522816.254665
ISK 144.4164
JEP 0.872043
JMD 181.593425
JOD 0.818525
JPY 184.256585
KES 149.84279
KGS 100.952112
KHR 4606.270046
KMF 492.934587
KPW 1038.955167
KRW 1742.530218
KWD 0.357106
KYD 0.959898
KZT 545.81317
LAK 25362.927345
LBP 103322.399474
LKR 363.414837
LRD 211.359654
LSL 19.573179
LTL 3.408684
LVL 0.698293
LYD 7.365885
MAD 10.821514
MDL 20.267041
MGA 4815.456563
MKD 61.671996
MMK 2423.952342
MNT 4131.380505
MOP 9.298924
MRU 45.757748
MUR 54.188078
MVR 17.847555
MWK 1997.218864
MXN 20.60259
MYR 4.653419
MZN 73.824597
NAD 19.572754
NGN 1591.648082
NIO 42.38107
NOK 11.249997
NPR 171.662829
NZD 2.023214
OMR 0.443924
PAB 1.151798
PEN 3.984967
PGK 4.982499
PHP 69.743338
PKR 321.38873
PLN 4.278085
PYG 7450.930113
QAR 4.199779
RON 5.097546
RSD 117.487414
RUB 92.536392
RWF 1682.258189
SAR 4.333957
SBD 9.28007
SCR 16.653351
SDG 693.802426
SEK 10.889748
SGD 1.484039
SHP 0.866109
SLE 28.455867
SLL 24207.495072
SOS 658.238646
SRD 43.118536
STD 23894.037272
STN 24.512292
SVC 10.078229
SYP 128.496955
SZL 19.565235
THB 37.63678
TJS 11.040228
TMT 4.051993
TND 3.395662
TOP 2.779551
TRY 51.477723
TTD 7.814156
TWD 36.889068
TZS 3001.476447
UAH 50.445734
UGX 4321.241876
USD 1.154414
UYU 46.644199
UZS 13994.260274
VES 546.488577
VND 30409.571329
VUV 137.780298
WST 3.202183
XAF 656.291802
XAG 0.015806
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.119862
XCG 2.075877
XDR 0.816216
XOF 656.303178
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.500692
ZAR 19.575283
ZMK 10391.115992
ZMW 22.258741
ZWL 371.720809
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.59

    +1.07%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.2

    -2.57%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    58.28

    +0.67%

  • AZN

    2.7600

    203.49

    +1.36%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    87.99

    +1.31%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.26

    +0.49%

  • GSK

    0.7000

    56.69

    +1.23%

  • BCE

    -0.9300

    24.45

    -3.8%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    94.45

    -0.38%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.21

    +0.53%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    12.61

    +0.71%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.99

    +5.63%

  • BP

    0.9500

    47.12

    +2.02%

Taliban PM calls for Muslim nations to recognise Afghan government
Taliban PM calls for Muslim nations to recognise Afghan government

Taliban PM calls for Muslim nations to recognise Afghan government

The Taliban's prime minister called Wednesday on Muslim nations to be the first to officially recognise their government, as aid-dependent Afghanistan faces economic collapse.

Text size:

No country has yet recognised the Taliban, with most watching to see how the hardline Islamists -– notorious for human rights abuses during their first stint in power -– restrict freedoms.

Although the group has promised a softer rule in line with their interpretation of Islamic Sharia law, women are largely excluded from government employment and secondary schools for girls are mostly shuttered.

"I call on Muslim countries to take the lead and recognise us officially. Then I hope we will be able to develop quickly," Mohammad Hassan Akhund told a conference in Kabul called to address the country's massive economic woes.

"We don't want it for the officials. We want it for our public," he said, adding that the Taliban had fulfilled all necessary conditions by restoring peace and security.

Afghanistan is in the grip of a humanitarian disaster, worsened by the Taliban takeover in August that prompted Western countries to freeze international aid and access to billions of dollars worth of assets held abroad.

The country was almost entirely dependent on foreign aid under the previous US-backed government, but jobs have dried up and most civil servants haven't been paid for months.

On Wednesday, the International Labour Organization said half a million Afghans lost their jobs in the third quarter of 2021, and this was expected to rise to 900,000 by the middle of this year -- with women disproportionately affected.

With poverty deepening and a drought devastating farming in many areas, the United Nations has warned that half the 38 million population faces food shortages.

The UN Security Council last month unanimously adopted a US resolution to allow some aid to reach desperate Afghans without violating international sanctions.

But there are growing calls from rights groups and aid organisations for the West to release more funds -- particularly in the middle of a harsh winter.

"Our situation still depends on the Americans. It will only get better if they decide to stop the sanctions," said Mohammad Moktar Nasseri, a former police officer who now sells vegetables at a Kabul market.

- 'Not bending to conditions' -

Donors face the delicate task of channelling aid without propping up the regime, with many members of what the Taliban call their interim government -- including Akhund -- on an international sanctions list.

The Taliban veteran was a close associate and political advisor to Mullah Omar, the founder of the movement and its first supreme leader.

The protection of women's rights and an inclusive government that reflects Afghanistan's ethnic groups are among the most important issues for the international community.

But Taliban Deputy Prime Minister Abdul Salam Hanafi told Wednesday's conference that the government "would not sacrifice the independence of the country's economy by bending to the conditions of donors".

Last month a meeting of the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) declined to formally recognise the government, and the new regime's foreign minister was excluded from the official photograph taken during the event.

But the OIC did pledge to work with the United Nations to try to unlock hundreds of millions of dollars in frozen Afghan assets, while urging Taliban rulers to abide by international obligations regarding the rights of women.

Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were the only nations to recognise the first Taliban government after they came to power in 1996 following a civil war.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)