Afghanistan: Taliban want to speak to UN General Assembly – politics

After taking power in Afghanistan, the militant Islamic Taliban also want to represent the country at the United Nations. In a letter to UN Secretary General António Guterres, which the German Press Agency had received in part, Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Chan Motaki asked for the right to speak at the current 76th General Debate of the UN General Assembly.

According to the United Nations, the letter was sent by the Foreign Ministry of the “Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan” to the UN headquarters in New York. In the letter, the Taliban argue with the actual balance of power: “Mohammad Ashraf Ghani has been deposed and (countries around the world) no longer recognize him as president,” it says. In fact, after their brilliant triumph in the face of the disastrous withdrawal of troops by the NATO states, the Islamists are de facto the rulers of the country. After the collapse of the Afghan army and Ghani’s flight, Germany, the USA and other countries see the Taliban as a point of contact and rulers. But they do not recognize it as a legitimate government.

According to the United Nations, the letter from the Taliban Foreign Ministry also states that the Taliban want to replace the previous Afghan UN ambassador, Ghulam Isaczai, with their own spokesman, Suhail Shahin.

The accreditation committee must decide on the request

The UN Secretariat forwarded the letter to the responsible certification committee for examination. This consists of representatives from nine member countries: the USA, Russia, China, Sweden, Namibia, the Bahamas, Bhutan, Sierra Leone and Chile. According to UN spokesman Farhan Haq, he has the power to decide which representatives and thus which leaderships of states are recognized by the United Nations. “Governments do not recognize the UN, their member states do,” Haq said.

In fact, there have been cases in the history of the United Nations that UN officials were not connected to the rulers in their home country. The Taliban controlled Kabul from the mid-1990s until 2001 – at the UN, however, Afghanistan was still represented by the ambassador of the previous government, as the community of states did not recognize the Taliban and has not done so to this day.

It can also have advantages for the international community to have direct contacts among autocracies in the world organization. For example, North Korea also has an agency in New York.

The foreign ministers of the G-20 countries held a video conference on Afghanistan on Wednesday on the sidelines of the UN general debate. Federal Foreign Minister Heiko Maas (SPD) also takes part in the round. Above all, it should be about how to deal with the Taliban in the future. The world’s largest economic powers are united in the G20. This also includes China and Russia, which – unlike all Western countries – did not close their embassies in Kabul after the Taliban came to power.

For the Taliban, having its own representation at the United Nations would not only be a major step towards international recognition; this could also pave the way for the country to access international aid. Whether Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Chan Motaki will actually appear in the next few days before the General Assembly is questionable: According to UN spokesman Haq, the accreditation committee has not yet scheduled a meeting. It is also planned that the current ambassador Isaczai will give his speech for Afghanistan on Monday.

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