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The Taliban has named its United Nations ambassador and has requested speaking time at the U.N. General Assembly in New York this week in a bid to officially represent Afghanistan just weeks after taking over control of the country.
The Associated Press reported the Taliban are challenging the credentials of Ghulam Isaczai, the U.N. ambassador who served under the western-backed Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.
On September 15, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres received a communication from Isaczai, Afghanistanâs currently accredited U.N. ambassador, with the list of Afghanistanâs delegation for the General Assembly, U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric told the Associated Press.
Five days after Isaczaiâs communication, the U.N. received another communication, this time from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, the formal name for the Taliban government. The Taliban communication, signed by Ameer Khan Muttaqi, the acting foreign minister for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Thus far, no countries have formally recognized the Islamic Emirate as the new Afghan government. The U.N. agreeing to let the Taliban speak at the General Assembly would grant a high-level platform and significant international recognition to the Taliban government.
Muttaqiâs letter requested the U.N.âs permission to speak at the General Assembly and argued that the old Afghan government should no longer be recognized because former President Ashraf Ghani was âoustedâ and countries across the world âno longer recognize him as president.â
Dujarric told the Associated Press that the Taliban nominated their own permanent U.N. representative, Mohammad Suhail Shaheen. The Taliban representative, Shaheen, has previously served as a spokesman for the Taliban during peace negotiations in Qatar. Shaheen has also continued to act as a spokesman for the Taliban in the weeks after the collapse of the U.S.-backed Afghan government and the Taliban takeover of Kabul.
The United States sits on the U.N.âs credentialing committee and a senior State Department official told the Associated Press the committee âwould take some time to deliberateâ the Taliban request. The official indicated it is unlikely the Taliban will see their credentials approved in time to speak this week, when high-level leaders address the U.N. before the main work of the General Assembly begins.
The Washington Examiner reported a State Department official said âThe Credentials Committee generally have taken some time. Iâm not going to predict how long itâs going to take this time. I would note that the broader General Assembly goes on for some three months. High-level week, obviously, is just this week, and I donât expect this issue to be resolved within high-level week. But, you know, watch the space.â
The Talibanâs record on womenâs rights may also complicate their reception at the U.N.
âLet us be clear: to be in touch with, does not mean at all anything that could be bestowing a formal recognition or legitimacy on the caretaker government,â the European Union high representative Josep Borrell said on Monday.
Borrell added, âOne of the benchmarks on which we were considering how to calibrate our relationship with the Afghan government was precisely this one: the way that the new government will treat the rights of women and girls. And the first news are not encouraging.â
Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, the ruling Emir of Qatar, has emerged as one potential ally to the Talibanâs bid to get speaking time at the U.N. In his own speech before the U.N., Tamim called on leaders to not boycott the Taliban. The Associated Press reported he stressed âthe necessity of continuing dialogue with Taliban, because boycott only leads to polarization and reactions, whereas dialogue could bring in positive results.â
Tamim said it should be up to the Afghan people to reach a political settlement.