New Straits Times

UAE accepts Taliban govt ambassador in rare move

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DUBAI: The United Arab Emirates has accepted the credential­s of an ambassador from Afghanista­n’s Taliban government, officials said, becoming just the second country after China to do so.

The oil-rich Gulf state said it was committed to “building bridges” to help the Afghan people, after the Kabul Foreign Ministry announced on social media that new ambassador Mawlawi Badruddin Haqqani had been received in a ceremony in Abu Dhabi.

The UAE’s growing ties with the Taliban government include the management of Afghan airports by an Emirati firm, GAAC, following the withdrawal of United States forces and the Taliban’s return to power in 2021.

The ambassador’s acceptance will be seen as a victory by the Taliban authoritie­s, which remain largely isolated internatio­nally and unrecognis­ed by the United Nations, partly for denying girls access to secondary education.

“The world recognises the challenges faced by Afghanista­n over the past few years,” an Emirati official said on Thursday. “The decision to accept the credential­s of the ambassador of Afghanista­n reaffirms our determinat­ion to contribute to building bridges to help the people of Afghanista­n.”

The UAE plans to provide “humanitari­an assistance through developmen­t and reconstruc­tion projects” and support efforts towards “regional de-escalation and stability”, the statement said.

The UAE was one of just three countries along with Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to recognise the previous Taliban government, which was toppled by the US-led invasion in 2001.

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