Afghan interim govt not inclusive, says Iran
TEHRAN/GENEVA: Iran charged Monday that the Taliban´s interim government announced last week in neighbouring Afghanistan is not representative of the country´s population.
It "is certainly not the inclusive government that the international community and the Islamic Republic of Iran expect," said Foreign Ministry Spokesman Said Khatibzadeh.
"We really have to wait and see how the Taliban respond to international demands," he added, speaking at a news conference in Tehran. Iran, which shares a more than 900 kilometre border with Afghanistan, already hosts nearly 3.5 million Afghans and fears a new influx of refugees.
Iran has had a contentious relationship with the Taliban during their 1996-2001 rule of an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, which it has never recognised. Tehran had nevertheless seemed to be moving towards a rapprochement with the Taliban in recent months.
Meanwhile, the UN rights chief said on Monday that the Taliban are breaking their promises on women´s rights and inclusivity in Afghanistan and she also criticised violence against protesters and alleged reprisal killings.
Michelle Bachelet said there were “credible allegations” former members of the security forces had been killed, and some people who worked for previous administrations had been detained and later “found dead”. She also highlighted allegations of house-to-house searches of former officials, raids on civil society groups and “increasing violence against protesters and journalists”.
She told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva she was “dismayed by the lack of inclusivity of the so-called caretaker cabinet, which includes no women and few non-Pashtuns”.
The announcement of the government of male loyalists last week was a key step in the Taliban´s consolidation of power over Afghanistan, following a military victory that saw them oust the US-backed administration on August 15.
In an update to the council on the rights situation, requested during a special session last month, Bachelet stressed that most Afghans were eager to see an end to decades of conflict and division. “They long for peace and stability in a country where they and their children can prosper,” she said.
And she highlighted promises by the Taliban to install a more moderate brand of rule including protecting women’s rights. “In contradiction to assurances that the Taliban would uphold women’s rights, over the past three weeks women have instead been progressively excluded from the public sphere,” she said.
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