Appointments
UN Conference on Afghanistan A Significant Event in Global Diplomacy.

By Kajal Sharma - 03 Jul 2024 06:04 PM
In the field of international relations, the globe saw an important event on June 30 and July 1, 2024. For the first time since assuming power in Afghanistan, the Taliban took part in the third United Nations Conference on Afghanistan, which was held in Doha, Qatar.In the field of international relations, the globe saw an important event on June 30 and July 1, 2024. For the first time since assuming power in Afghanistan, the Taliban took part in the third United Nations Conference on Afghanistan, which was held in Doha, Qatar.Preparations are underway for a meeting between the Taliban, envoys from Member States, and other relevant parties, which will be hosted by the UN.
The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan briefed the Security Council today and advocated for increased flexibility, emphasizing that engagement does not equate to normalization.The third meeting in this format is set to take place in Doha in nine days, and the de facto authorities have indicated that they are getting ready to attend, according to Roza Otunbayeva, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA). "We hope that in Doha, important stakeholders will get together around a table, have face-to-face conversations, reaffirm the values that underpin the agreement to engage, and decide on next steps to reduce the uncertainty that the Afghan people face," the speaker stated.The expectations that Doha "has generated are significant and cannot realistically be met in a single meeting," she said. "It cannot be repeated enough that this sort of engagement is not legitimization or normalization," she continued, even though there is no alternative for working with Afghanistan.
Though political stability has been preserved by the Taliban, there is little room for internal criticism and women are still subject to harsh restrictions. She emphasized the need for domestic political legitimacy and said that even with almost $7 billion in humanitarian aid, "massive poverty still plagues Afghanistan." Lisa Doughten, Director of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs' Financing and Partnerships Division, also addressed the Council, detailing the dire circumstances facing the nation—with over 50 per cent of