The Taliban are willing to dialogue with the rest of the world and the international community should help develop it Afghanistan, said today, Wednesday (27/10) the Minister of Foreign Affairs Of China, Wang Yi. Addressing a video conference in Iran on Afghanistan, Wang said Beijing intended to host further talks between Afghanistan and its neighbors on the country’s future.
“The Taliban are eager for dialogue with the world (…) China will host the third meeting of Afghanistan’s Neighbors at the appropriate time,” Wang was quoted as saying by Iranian state television. The summit of Afghanistan and neighboring countries was attended by the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, and China and Russia participated via video link.
The talks followed a similar conference attended by Afghanistan’s neighboring countries, hosted by Pakistan in September, aimed at establishing a lasting peace in Afghanistan. China, which did not fight in Afghanistan, tends to oil branch in the Taliban since regaining power in Afghanistan after the withdrawal of US forces in August, according to the APE-MPE.
What is the attitude of the West towards the Islamists?
The United States and other Western countries are looking for ways to deal with the Taliban in order to ensure that humanitarian aid is provided to the country, without giving them the legitimacy they seek. US officials and Taliban representatives discussed humanitarian aid to Afghanistan this month in Qatar, but Washington noted that these meetings are not tantamount to recognizing the Taliban.
The United States and other Western countries have reservations about providing resources to the Taliban until the Islamist movement offers guarantees that human rights, and in particular women’s rights, will be respected.
At the conference held today in Iran, the Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdolachian supported him formation of a government with the participation of all parties in Afghanistan, broadcast on state television. His comments echoed Iran’s official stance.
Shiite Iran has been hostile to the hardline Sunni Taliban for decades, but in recent years has had open meetings with Taliban leaders. In July, Tehran hosted a meeting between representatives of the then Afghan government and a high-ranking Taliban political committee. Iran has criticized the Taliban, which seized power in Afghanistan in August, for excluding ethnic minorities from the government.

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