UN removes 14 Taliban members from sanctions list

Germany’s UN ambassador says the decision ‘sends a strong signal’.


Afp July 17, 2011

NEW YORK:


The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) committee overseeing sanctions removed 14 Taliban leaders from an international blacklist in order to encourage peaceful reconciliation in war-torn Afghanistan.


Germany’s UN ambassador Peter Wittig, who heads the Security Council for the month of July, said the decision “sends a strong signal: the Security Council and the international community support the efforts of the Afghan government to engage reconciled Taliban in a political dialogue in order to achieve peace and security in Afghanistan”.

The 14 Taliban on the list include Arsalan Rahmani Daulat, Habibullah Fawzi, Sayeedur Rahman Haqqani and Faqir Mohammad, all members of Afghanistan’s peace council, Wittig said.

“The international community recognises efforts made by member of the High Peace Council to work towards peace, stability, and reconciliation,” said Wittig.

“All Afghans are encouraged to join these efforts. The message is clear: engaging for peace pays off,” said Wittig.

Ahead of the decision, 137 members of the Taliban were on a sanctions list that called for an asset freeze, a travel ban and an arms embargo. Wittig did not release the names of the other Taliban members removed from the list.

The UNSC on June 17 split the international sanctions regime for the Taliban and al Qaeda to encourage the Taliban to join reconciliation efforts in Afghanistan.

The council unanimously passed two resolutions that set up one new blacklist of individuals and organisations accused of links to al Qaeda and a second for those linked to the Taliban militia.

The two groups have until now been handled by the same sanctions committee. But the international powers wanted to separate them to highlight the divide between al Qaeda’s global jihadist agenda and the Taliban’s focus on Afghanistan.



Published in The Express Tribune, July 17th, 2011.

COMMENTS (2)

AN | 12 years ago | Reply

Funny! When we do this then we are considered playing double games and when US does it, they are called reconciliation peaceful approaches.

Salman | 12 years ago | Reply

Where are the whiners of tribune here now who criticize ISI of having links with Talibans ?

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