Diplomacy: End of travel ban exemption for Taliban

PostedAugust 20, 2022, 03:19

DiplomacyEnd of travel ban exemption for Taliban

13 Taliban officials still benefited from an exemption to the travel ban from the UN, for diplomatic reasons.

Under a 2011 UN Security Council resolution, 135 Taliban leaders are subject to a sanctions regime that includes asset freezes and travel bans. (illustrative image)

Getty Images via AFP

The travel ban exemptions enjoyed by 13 Taliban officials on the UN sanctions list will end on Friday evening, pending an agreement by members of the Security Council on a possible extension, we learned from diplomatic sources.

Under a 2011 UN Security Council resolution, 135 Taliban leaders are subject to a sanctions regime that includes asset freezes and travel bans. But 13 of them benefited from an exemption from the travel ban, renewed regularly, to allow them to meet officials from other countries abroad.

List reduced to six officials

In June, the Sanctions Committee in charge of Afghanistan, composed of the 15 members of the UN Security Council, had already removed from the list two Taliban ministers responsible for education, in retaliation for the drastic reduction in the rights of women and girls by the regime. They had at the same time renewed the exemption for the others for two months (until August 19), plus an additional month if no member objected. And Ireland opposed it this week, according to diplomatic sources.

After talks in which China and Russia supported an identical extension while the United States defended a reduced list of officials and authorized destinations, the latest proposal on the table plans to allow six officials to travel anywhere for diplomatic reasons, the diplomatic sources told AFP.

“Counterproductive” according to Beijing

If no member of the Council opposes it by Monday afternoon, it will come into force for three months. In the meantime, exemptions for the 13 officials end Friday at midnight. It is “counterproductive” to link human rights in Afghanistan, and in particular women’s rights, to the travel issues of Taliban leaders, a spokesman for the Chinese presidency of the Security Council regretted this week.

“These exemptions are still just as necessary,” he added, denouncing the position of Westerners. “If re-imposing a travel ban on Taliban officials is the only thing they want to do, then clearly they haven’t learned their lesson.”

Despite their promises to be more flexible when they returned to power a year ago, the Taliban have largely reverted to the ultra-rigorous interpretation of Islam that marked their first spell in power (1996-2001 ), severely restricting the rights and freedoms of women and girls.

(AFP)

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