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New South Wales MPs call on Australia government to condemn Azerbaijan aggression against Artsakh

12:02, 11.08.2022
Region:World NewsArmeniaKarabakhAzerbaijan
Theme: Politics
www.news.am

The convenors of the New South Wales Armenia-Australia Friendship Group appealed to Australia’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon. Penny Wong, requesting the Federal Government publicly condemns Azerbaijan’s latest attacks against the indigenous Armenians of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), reported ( http://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/New-South-Wales-Parliamentary-Friends-of-Armenia-Call-on-Australian-Government-to-Condemn-Azerbaijani-Aggression ) the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU).
Member for Davidson and Speaker of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, the Hon. Jonathan O’Dea and Member of the Legislative Council, the Hon. Walt Secord––who are Chair and Vice-Chair of the Armenia-Australia Friendship Group––raised concern over the latest unprovoked ceasefire violation committed by Azerbaijan.
Their letter voiced the bipartisan group’s objection over the targeted attacks against civilian settlements in Martuni, and attempts by Azerbaijan to cross the predetermined line of contact as determined by the November 2020 trilateral agreement, violating several fundamental human rights, resulting in the death of two Armenian servicemen and leaving 19 wounded.
“The parliamentary group ask that your government seriously consider publicly condemning Azerbaijan’s recent illegal violations of the ceasefire agreement,” their letter added.
This new wave of aggression has resulted in the forced displacement and ethnic cleansing of thousands of Armenians from the villages of Berdzor and Aghavno, located inside the Berdzor (Lachin) corridor, which represents a clear violation of Article 7, Section 1(d) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, prohibiting the “deportation or forcible transfer of population.”

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Official: All conditions for media development available in Azerbaijan

11 August 2022 17:19 (UTC+04:00) – AZERNEWS.AZ

By Sabina Mammadli
Azerbaijan has every condition for the development of media, Prosecutor-General Kamran Aliyev has opined, Azernews reports.
He made the remarks at a conference on the information security of society in Baku, where media captains and NGO representatives were invited.
According to him, the improvement of modern societies can’t be viewed without media development.
“The media is evidently the fourth estate in Azerbaijan. During the Second Karabakh War, our journalists worked directly on the front line, keeping the whole world informed about Azerbaijan’s just struggle,” Aliyev stated.
The Azerbaijani parliament passed a new media law in December 2021. It establishes the general rules for organizing media activities, as well as the legal and economic foundations for those activities, as well as the receipt, preparation, transmission, production, and dissemination of information. The document is divided into nine chapters and 78 clauses.
It covers every detail, from increasing journalists’ professionalism to resolving their social issues. The document establishes the legal framework required for better information security protection in Azerbaijan.

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German MEP draws Borrell’s attention to the un-constructive behavior of Azerbaijan

21:10, 9 August 2022
YEREVAN, AUGUST 9, ARMENPRESS. Member of the European Parliament representing Germany, permanent member of the Subcommittee on Security and Defence, Lars Patrick Berg, addressed a question to EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell regarding the escalation of the situation in Nagorno Karabakh. ARMENPRESS reports, citing European Neighbourhood Monitor, a number of other MEPs joint the question.
“While the world’s attention is on Russia’s criminal invasion of Ukraine, the situation in Nagorno‑Karabakh is deteriorating.
Azerbaijani troops attacked the village of Parukh on 24 March 2022 and violated the ceasefire on 28 May 2022, fatally wounding one Armenian soldier.
This happened one day after a crude statement from Azerbaijan’s President, Ilham Aliyev, who depicted the use of force as an attempt to enforce international law, claiming that the Nagorno‑Karabakh conflict has been completely solved, making demands over the sovereign territory of Armenia and using harsh words, saying that ‘the Nazis in Armenia’ ‘should sit down and not look our way if they do not want their heads to be crushed again’.
These actions and statements openly go against the provisions of the ceasefire agreement of November 2020, as well as the spirit of the statement made after the trilateral meeting between Armenia, Azerbaijan and the EU in Brussels on 22 May 2022.
We would therefore like to ask the Vice‑President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy what concrete steps the European External Action Service is taking to prevent a recrudescence of the hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh and to continue a constructive dialogue between the parties”, reads the question.
In response, Josep Borrell said that the EU is deeply concerned by the recent incidents between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the possibility of further escalation. The Commission regrets the loss of life.
“The EU takes a positive approach to the continuation of the trilateral talks led by the President of the European Council with the Armenian Prime Minister and the Azerbaijani President. These efforts have already produced numerous results, but a peace process is never without difficulties. The EU’s goal remains to contribute to a comprehensive agreement for lasting peace and security in the region.
The High Representative/Vice President has been in regular contact with Armenia and Azerbaijan since the outbreak of hostilities. The EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the Conflict in Georgia has been involved in the preparation of the trilateral meetings and has followed up on the ground on the implementation of the agreements reached between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, most recently in early June 2022. On May 31, 2022, the Spokesperson for the President of the European Council issued a statement reiterating the need for a fair and balanced negotiation process and the need to prepare the population for peace. The President of the European Council also addressed both heads of state and government in early July 2022 regarding the recent sharp statements that are not conducive to the nature and spirit of the talks and expressed the EU’s readiness to convene the next round of trilateral talks in Brussels”, reads the answer of EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell.

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Algerian foreign minister to visit Azerbaijan

9 August 2022 14:13 (UTC+04:00) – AZERNEWS.AZ

By Vugar Khalilov
Algeria’s Foreign Minister and President’s Special Envoy Ramtane Lamamra will visit Azerbaijan on August 10, Azernews reports, citing the Foreign Ministry.
As part of the visit, Lamamra will meet his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov. Following the meeting, the parties will have a joint briefing.
On July 8, the Azerbaijani parliament set up a working group on Azerbaijani-Algerian inter-parliamentary relations.
Azerbaijan-Algeria relations are successfully developing, and both countries cooperate effectively within a variety of international organizations. There are good opportunities for the development of bilateral relationships in all spheres in the future.
Algeria recognized the independence of Azerbaijan on December 20, 1991. Diplomatic relations between the two countries were established on April 22, 1994. Azerbaijan opened its embassy in Algeria on November 28, 2014, while the latter opened its diplomatic mission in Azerbaijan in January 2015.
The trade turnover between the two countries amounted to $1.3 million in 2021.

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Migration bill passes third reading in parliament

14 June 2013 01:31 (UTC+04:00) – AZERNEWS.AZ

By Nigar Orujova
The Azerbaijani parliament at its extraordinary session adopted Migration Code in the third reading on June 13.
The Code sets standards for public policy in migration, regulation of the migration processes and relationships that arise in this field, as well as rules on the legal status of foreigners and persons without citizenship in Azerbaijan. The updated document was presented by Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Legal Policy and State Building Ali Huseynli.
During a debate on the bill, some parliament members proposed to allow travelling of a child with permission of one of the parents. This clause is based on the fact that in some cases, when one parent breaks ties with his or her family, the other parent loses the right to take the child out of the country.
Huseynli commented that such permission may create the conditions for abuse, including human trafficking.
The final version of the bill reflected such issues as the study of the Azerbaijani language by foreign citizens permanently residing in Azerbaijan and granting citizenship to foreigners who invested hefty assets in the country’s economy, as well as the citizenship of people living outside the country and the issue of simplifying registration, Huseynli said.
The lawmakers also made amendments to the Administrative Code at the extraordinary meeting.
Huseynli said that according to the amendments, the right of foreigners and stateless persons who were evicted from Azerbaijan by administrative deportation to re-enter the country is limited in duration from one to five years.
According to the amendments, the deadline for leaving the country for deported persons is 48 hours.

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Algeria supports Azerbaijan’s initiatives, FM Bayramov says

10 Aug 2022 12:48
www.News.az

“This visit is very important for both countries. This is a manifestation of high-level dialogue,” said Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov at a press conference held following the meeting with Ramtan Lamamra, Minister of Foreign Affairs and National Community Abroad of the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, News.az reports.
Jeyhun Bayramov said he held one-sided and extended with his Algerian counterpart: “We held extensive discussions on cooperation at the bilateral level and within the framework of international organizations. I once again congratulate Algeria on the 60th anniversary of its independence. The Speaker of the Algerian Parliament also participated in the Baku conference on establishing the Parliamentary Network of the Non-Aligned Movement. In general, Algeria, one of the founders of the Non-Aligned Movement, is very active and supports Azerbaijan’s initiative as chairman. Two weeks ago, Algeria also actively participated in the founding conference of the youth organization of the Non-Aligned Movement,’ Azerbaijani Foreign Minister stated.

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Start of direct trade between Türkiye, Armenia would be win-win: Foreign Ministry

Turkish-Armenian trade currently goes indirectly through neighboring Georgia and is worth $230M, with some 15,000 trucks annually making the journey, says senior diplomat
Merve Aydogan   |11.08.2022 – aa.com.tr

ANKARA

Direct trade between the neighbors of Türkiye and Armenia, long estranged but now seeking rapprochement, would be a “win-win” for both sides, according to a high-level Turkish Foreign Ministry official.
Speaking to a group of journalists, the official, who declined to be named, said trade between Türkiye and Armenia currently goes indirectly through neighboring Georgia and is worth $230 million, with approximately 15,000 trucks making the journey annually.
“If both parties can ensure the evolving of relations to a positive point by showing the necessary flexibility, this will be a win-win for both countries,” the official added.
Noting that the current process between Türkiye and Armenia is more seen as a “trust-building process” rather than a normalization process for both sides, the diplomat stressed that both sides have adopted an approach of taking confidence-building steps, with each step supporting the next, and not setting great expectations that may cause major disappointment.
The official added that Turkish Ambassador Serdar Kilic and Armenian Deputy Parliament Speaker Ruben Rubinyan, the special envoys for reconciliation appointed last December by both sides, agreed to continue the process step by step.
“The current situation is not the desired picture in Turkish-Armenian relations and it is necessary to make an effort to evolve this picture into the desired one,” the official added.
Confidence-building measures
On the confidence-building steps, the official said during their bilateral meeting on July 1, the special representatives agreed on two concrete proposals.
Stressing that the agreement by the envoys is not “the signing of a protocol” but rather reflects their agreement on two confidence-building measures to be taken in the coming days, the official added that they agreed to start work on realizing the confidence-building steps.
“It was written in a way not to slow down the process, but to avoid disappointments arising from excessive expectations in case there may be some problems experienced amid the process,” the official added.
Expressing optimism in the next meeting set for September, the official said there are technical steps to be taken by authorities of the two countries, adding that there are many technical details.
“These (details) should only be determined by the experts of that subject coming together,” the high-level official said, adding that each side is doing its own “homework” towards the next steps, identifying “the missing procedures or documents, determining the technical details needed.”
“We hope for relevant authorities of each countries to come together, hopefully in September, without too much delay, and from there on we can be at a point that would enable exchange of views on technical issues and ensure quick implementation of the process.”
The official also stressed that the situation on the ground is very different than anticipated from afar, pointing to the difficulties of renovating the infrastructure at border gates amid winter conditions.
“One foot of the historical Silk Road Bridge at the Ani Ruins is in Armenia and the other is in Türkiye,” in the Kars province, the official added, saying that it was destroyed by Russian soldiers during the 1877-1878 Ottoman-Russian War, also known as the ’93 war, based on the year 1293 in the Islamic calendar.
Stressing that repairing the historic bridge would be a “serious confidence-building step,” the official added: “For all this to be done, the physical conditions must also be suitable. Such a thing can’t be tried during the winter months.”
The first round of normalization talks was held in Moscow on Jan. 14, where both parties agreed to continue negotiations without any preconditions, according to a statement released after the meeting.
The Turkish and Armenian envoys met for the second time in Vienna on Feb. 24, and then on May 3 in the same city.
Also, a historic bilateral meeting took place between the foreign ministers of Türkiye and Armenia on the sidelines of the Antalya Diplomacy Forum on the Turkish Riviera on March 12.
As part of the efforts, Türkiye and Armenia also resumed commercial flights as of Feb. 2 after a two-year hiatus.

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Can the Taliban Be Contained?

Foreign Affairs
August 16, 2022
Why the West Needs to Nurture the Movement’s Realists

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Acting Taliban Defense Minister Mullah Yaqoob Mujahid (left) with other Taliban leaders, Kabul, August 15, 2022
Ali Khara / Reuters

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It is difficult to overstate the multiple crises facing Afghanistan. With severe shortages and sky-high food prices, the World Food Program has reported that more than half the population is “marching to starvation”; an astonishing 97 percent of the population are at risk of falling below the poverty line by the end of 2022. Meanwhile, the Afghan government, with its profound disenfranchisement of women—girls older than 12 have been banned from school—has become the most gender repressive in the world. Western intelligence experts are also concerned that the country is once again becoming a haven for terrorist groups, as was made clear by the recent U.S. assassination of the al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in the center of Kabul.
One year into Taliban rule, it is easy to blame these problems on the country’s new leaders. After the group captured Kabul, it was presented with an extraordinary opportunity to renounce some of its most extreme policies in exchange for some degree of international support. But it squandered a number of overtures by refusing to lift the ban on girls’ secondary education, for example, or taking steps to govern in a more inclusive manner. The regime’s failure to decisively deal with international terrorist organizations such as al Qaeda has further frustrated both Western leaders and Afghanistan’s own neighbors, which have demanded that the Taliban government match its words with action.
But Afghanistan’s woes go far beyond the mere fact of Taliban control. The economic situation has been made exceedingly worse by the international community’s decision to disengage from all development projects and to freeze $9 billion worth of assets that belong to Afghanistan and its citizens, regardless of who rules the country. Moreover, many of the country’s problems began long before the U.S. withdrawal in August 2021. Driving the country’s desperate situation are a confluence of disasters arising from over four decades of conflict, bad governance, and economic mismanagement, compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic and the worsening effects of climate change.

The urgent challenge now is to prevent the country from a broader collapse. Although international efforts to provide basic humanitarian aid helped Afghanistan avoid the most dire outcomes last winter, the country is expected to face a similarly grim predicament later this year. Nor is there yet a global consensus about how to deal with the regime in Kabul. What has become apparent over the last 12 months is that the Taliban are not a monolithic political movement. Rescuing the country will require not only greater clarity about the roots of the current mess but also creative new approaches to dealing with its poorly understood rulers and the region.
PREACHERS AND PRAGMATISTS
Contrary to common assumptions, the Taliban leadership holds a broad range of views. During the years in which it fought the U.S.-backed government in Kabul, the movement remained focused on defeating the Afghan National Army and outlasting the government’s international backers. The quick disintegration of the army and the Biden administration’s decision to pull out U.S. forces allowed the Taliban to quickly attain their ultimate goal of reconquering the entire country. Since then, however, they have often been unsure how to govern it.

Although different factions—led by various charismatic leaders—remain committed to the Taliban leadership and to reaching major decisions through consensus, cracks have started to emerge. The slightly older and more conservative wing of the party remains intent on implementing the Taliban’s mid-1990s credo, word for word. Members of this group include the Taliban’s secretive leader, Mawlawi Haibatullah Akhunzada, and his inner circle, made up mostly of village mullahs and a handful of conservative cabinet ministers. Based in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar, in the south, Mawlawi Haibatullah and his followers have shown an inclination to take a more conservative position on all major policy decisions, including on women’s rights and girls’ secondary education.
But leaders such as Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, the deputy prime minister and one of the founding members of the movement, along with younger Taliban leaders including the “princelings” Siraj Haqqani, the acting interior minister, and Mullah Yaqoob Mujahid, the acting defense minister and the son of the movement’s founder, have begun to challenge this approach, albeit privately. Increasingly, these more pragmatic leaders—in and outside Kabul—approach their positions as long term and view engagement with the world as paramount to achieving their ambitions. It is understood that they tend to be more focused on “God and country” than on just “God.”
Although most of these figures have remained silent on their policy differences with the conservative leadership, their supporters and proxies from across the country—second-tier leaders as well as religious leaders—have come forward and challenged decisions such as the ban on girls’ education. Furthermore, many local leaders—buoyed by the stance of these leaders—have continued to quietly allow for secondary girls’ education in almost a third of the country, directly challenging the edict coming out of Kandahar.
 
Some Taliban leaders see engagement with the world as important to their long-term ambitions.
Of course, referring to leaders such as Haqqani and Yaqoob as pragmatic may seem naive, given the Haqqani network’s historic ties to extremist groups and the recent assassination of Zawahiri in central Kabul. But such is politics in Afghanistan: there are many shades of gray. Moreover, the most urgent question facing the West and other international allies is not who rules Afghanistan—a question over which they now have very little control—but rather how to deal most effectively with the rulers it has.
Within the Taliban, the pragmatists also diverge from the ideologues on the matter of inclusivity and form of government. The pragmatists realize that survival will depend not only on international recognition and engagement but also on domestic support. Some of this group recognize that although the Taliban are rooted in the most extreme conservative populations of the largely Pashtun regions of Afghanistan, neglecting the interests of Afghanistan’s other minorities and the country’s urban populations will only weaken the movement over time. Nonetheless, the Taliban leadership does not endorse this urgent need to engage and to accommodate. Mawlawi Haibatullah, in his address to the loya jirga in Kabul on July 1, 2022, made clear that although he endorsed a general amnesty for officials of the previous Afghan government, he does not see a formal role for them in the new political order.
It is not yet clear how these differences will play out. Alliances—whether loose or formal—will allow the Kabul-based leaders to further consolidate their power at the expense of their more conservative colleagues. But given the movement’s extraordinary unity and resilience, the ascendance by the pragmatists over the conservatives will likely happen through an evolution rather than a coup. Still, as the Kabul leadership gains clout, the voices of the more traditional elements could be diminished or at least confined to specific areas, as they were under past governments.

Consensus governing has also meant that local leaders and the Taliban cabinet have not been able to govern in a decisive manner in a country that requires enormous leadership given the challenges it faces daily. The diversity of views within the movement, however,—along with the inability of China, Iran, Pakistan, and Russia to moderate the Taliban regime—could present new opportunities for the United States and its allies to build a more constructive approach to Afghanistan.
DEAD ON ARRIVAL
In order to develop a better Taliban strategy, the United States will first have to come to terms with the political dynamics that gave rise to the movement’s return in 2021. It would be a mistake to assume that Afghanistan fell apart in the weeks preceding the U.S. withdrawal one year ago. The foundations for this collapse were laid more than a decade earlier, soon after the inauguration of Afghan President Hamid Karzai in 2004.
The rise of a violent insurgency, abetted by safe havens in Pakistan and the legacy of decades of war, meant that Afghanistan was ill suited to rapid change. In addition, the corruption and ineptitude of the Kabul government and its inability to take advantage of billions of dollars of Western aid and thousands of Western troops meant that Karzai and his successors were unable to build a viable, secure, and stable nation. But there is little doubt that the international community—led by the Americans, who soon became distracted by the war in Iraq—enabled successive, corrupt governments in Kabul that were bound to fail.
For nearly two decades, the United States addressed the Afghan dilemma without ever adopting a larger vision for the country. Instead, Afghanistan’s management was tackled one year at a time, with a new plan every time a new U.S. ambassador or commander took over or new presidential administration came to office. Washington often contradicted its own policies. An aversion to nation building gave way to nation building “light” and then nation building “on steroids.” The Pentagon determined that Afghan forces should remain small but then decided to double them. The idea of an Afghan air force was ignored initially but revived later with a limited range of aircraft. Training was originally outsourced to Germany but then taken back by the U.S. military.
Established in Bonn in 2001 amid much hope, the post-Taliban government was already on life support by 2014, following the deeply flawed presidential elections that year. Ignoring vote rigging on a massive scale, the international community opted to go along with the results, dismissing millions of votes in the process. Not only did the United States and its allies fail to hold any individual or institution to account, but by forcing the two leading contenders, Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani, into an unworkable marriage—a “national unity” government—they left the Afghan political leadership deeply weakened at a time of critical urgency.
Meanwhile, Washington ignored—or worse, encouraged—corruption and predatory behavior on the part of Afghan officials and authorities. And amid a worsening security situation, the United States increasingly relied on night raids and indiscriminate bombing attacks in which civilians were often killed. In this environment, it was not difficult for the Taliban to gain new support. Policymakers understood this early but failed to act on it; then they opted to bail out when it was too late.
TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE
Again and again, the United States failed to prepare for or engage with the Taliban. Already in 2003, when the newly established Afghan government tried to engage with the Taliban, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld decided to veto the initiative. Further discussions during the Obama years, which culminated in the opening of a Taliban office in Doha, were abandoned far too quickly in 2013, when Karzai protested.
When U.S. President Donald Trump took office in 2017, his initial instinct was simply to walk away from Afghanistan. But the arrival of H. R. McMaster as the national security adviser postponed the inevitable for almost 18 months; McMaster argued that engaging with the Taliban was a futile endeavor and that the movement could still be defeated on the battlefield. In the fall of 2018, however, Trump made it clear to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that he wanted out. His determination to withdraw culminated in the appointment of a seasoned diplomat, Zalmay Khalilzad, as special envoy for Afghan Reconciliation. Khalilzad’s task was two-fold: first, he was to secure a deal with the Taliban that would allow for a gradual drawdown of U.S. troops and an agreement on terrorism so that there would be no repeat of 9/11. Second, he was to forge an intra-Afghan peace deal to ensure a peaceful transition to a new government.
The flawed February 2020 deal that emerged from this effort was the beginning of the end for Afghanistan. In reality, the agreement brought no progress on peace. It required little of the Taliban apart from an unenforceable pledge to break with al Qaeda, and it seemed mostly designed to allow U.S. troops to leave without being attacked by the group—an astonishingly low bar for the world’s most powerful military. Khalilzad’s oft-quoted remark—“nothing is agreed until everything is agreed”—reflected the hollowness of U.S. policy. With Washington renouncing the troops and assistance to the Afghan National Army that constituted its most important leverage, the Taliban could simply wait for the United States to leave.

 
Again and again, the United States failed to prepare for the Taliban.
 
The Ghani government’s inability to understand the significance of the Trump decision ensured that it was unable to operate in a post-American environment. During a trip to Washington in June 2021, Ghani opted to praise President Joe Biden and assured him repeatedly of the Afghan forces’ preparedness. Despite the fact that the Taliban were already rapidly advancing, Ghani failed to secure additional assistance, including the air support and maintenance required to operate the Afghan military’s equipment and hardware.
Biden’s decision to complete the U.S. drawdown, meanwhile, triggered a rush for the exit by U.S. contractors who were in Afghanistan to offer logistics, service, and upkeep to the Afghan troops. This all happened many weeks before anyone bothered raising the consequences of a rapid drawdown in Washington. The Afghan military was deprived not only of basic functional support but also of planning and strategy. What followed was a slow-motion train wreck.
Now, even Iran and Pakistan have buyer’s remorse with the Taliban. Having backed or supported the group in various ways during the insurgency, the two countries have discovered that the Taliban are far from compliant in Kabul. Both of these points are important: the former because some of Afghanistan’s neighbors were content to see the West lose and the latter because these same neighbors lack the resolve and resources to help the country survive under its new leaders.
AFGHANS INTO MILITANTS
It is bad enough that the Taliban are now ensconced in Kabul, but a greater source of concern are reports that even more dangerous groups are once again taking root in Afghanistan. The UN and other sources have provided extensive evidence that foreign terrorist organizations, including a branch of the Islamic State known as Islamic State Khorasan (ISIS-K), among others, remain active in Afghanistan. The Taliban tolerate some of these groups, such as al Qaeda, because of historic ties and for the leverage the groups may provide against regional and international powers; others, such as ISIS-K, have flourished because of myopic decisions by the Taliban government, such as freeing prisoners from Bagram in August 2021, and the Taliban’s targeting of rival groups, which has helped swell the ranks of ISIS-K.
The country’s dire economic situation has not helped. A majority of young Afghans—in a country that boasts the youngest population of any state outside sub-Saharan Africa—remain unemployed, and, as a result, many are being lured into joining ISIS-K and other militant movements. If there were alternatives, they would seek them. But by abandoning Afghanistan, the West has deprived the population of secure livelihoods, the consequence of which is an entire generation of young Afghans who are vulnerable to recruitment by radical groups.
 
The assassination of one terrorist leader will not solve the problem.
The presence of Zawahiri in Kabul at the time of his assassination highlights the conundrum Taliban leaders face concerning their historic allies. The rank and file as well as the regional founders of the Taliban will not tolerate the expulsion of foreign terrorist leaders and their supporters, given the religious ideologies these groups share with the Taliban and al Qaeda’s oath of allegiance to the Taliban leader.
But the removal of one terrorist leader will not solve the problem. In 2021, Colin Kahl, the U.S. undersecretary of defense, warned that ISIS-K and al Qaeda forces based in Afghanistan could have the capacity to launch attacks on the West within two years. Clearly, more comprehensive engagement and pressure will be needed to persuade the Taliban to shun groups allied with the movement. The Taliban will need to understand that the policies that worked well during their violent insurgency are unlikely to help them govern the country.

Although Western governments may be encouraged by the conclusion of some U.S. spy agencies that al Qaeda has not done much to reestablish itself since the Taliban took control and that only a handful of longtime al Qaeda members remain in the country, many analysts remain skeptical.
COMING IN FROM THE COLD
What the last four decades have shown is that what happens in Afghanistan rarely stays in Afghanistan. Today’s dire economic and humanitarian crisis could reignite a civil war, which would further destabilize the wider region and allow international terrorist groups to reestablish themselves in the country—even more brazenly than in previous decades.
Europe’s leaders, currently dealing with the Ukrainian refugee crisis, could soon find themselves coping with a fresh influx of desperate Afghans and an increased flow of narcotics from the world’s largest producer of heroin. Already, large numbers of Afghans are attempting to cross any border that is open to them, driven into flight by fear and hunger. They may be forced to make the journey northward, along the same route used by drug smugglers, passing through Iran and Turkey. On a continent where even centrist political leaders have grown hostile to new refugees, the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Afghans could dramatically alter the political landscape.
The United States, European countries, and international organizations have sought to avert a humanitarian disaster by providing emergency assistance to the population through the UN and other NGOs coupled with limited development or “basic needs” efforts focused on livelihoods, food security, and economic resilience. But these initiatives will have a durable impact only if the West remains engaged with Afghanistan, including with the Taliban government. It has also become clear that Europe and the Western allies are unprepared to take the initiative in Afghanistan; U.S. leadership is of paramount importance.
In fact, there is much more that Washington and its international partners can do not only to steer the pragmatic leaders of the Taliban toward a more inclusive and moderate Afghanistan but also to help the Taliban come in from the cold. There needs to be a clear, incremental road map to normalization that sets standards and expectations and also prioritizes engagement. This road map should have well-defined phases that allow time for difficult decisions and confidence building on both sides—perhaps over a 24- to 36- month period.
International recognition need not be an all-or-nothing proposition. There could be limited recognition in exchange for progress on key issues: rights for women and minorities, say, or steps toward a more inclusive government. But Western governments must act now to support a national dialogue outside of stilted meetings between diplomats and the Taliban in third countries. For example, an intra-Afghan forum could be convened in which prominent Afghan leaders—members of the Taliban, opposition leaders, civil society, and others—gather to discuss the future of the country. And international donors need to move forward with bold efforts to safeguard the gains made in Afghanistan over the last two decades. This means finding ways to increase educational access for all Afghans, maintaining an independent media, and harnessing the private sector to provide jobs, economic opportunity, and a moderating influence on the government. Although international donors are no longer providing hundreds of billions of dollars to station their own troops in Afghanistan and support the Afghan security forces, robust humanitarian and development aid could have a big impact at a fraction of the cost.
Many continue to view the Taliban leadership as intransigent, recalcitrant, and unyielding. A year in office has helped some Taliban leaders recognize the need for compromise, even though they have mostly not acted on that impulse. But the cement is not yet dry. As has been shown in the case of past regime changes such as those in Cuba and Iran, the window for change, once passed, can remain closed for a very long time. By nurturing and encouraging moderating tendencies in Afghanistan and by allowing more pragmatic leaders to form new domestic alliances, the West can help empower the realist elements of the Taliban. This will not be easy, and for the moment, the country seems to be on a trajectory that does not bode well for compromise. But Washington ignores Afghanistan at its own peril: by failing to support the Afghan people or engage with the Taliban, the West may be consigning the country to a future as a humanitarian catastrophe and terrorist haven.

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Yemen: Diplomats push for extension of truce as deadline nears

Officials see window of opportunity to extend and deepen ceasefire, with signs of battle fatigue on both sides

Supporters of Yemen’s Shiite Houthi rebels gather to commemorate Eid al-Ghadir in the capital, Sanaa, on 17 July 2022 (AFP)

By  
Sean Mathews

Middle East Eye – Published date: 29 July 2022 14:44 UTC |  

Diplomats are shuttling between Middle Eastern capitals in a final push to extend and deepen a fragile truce in Yemen, before it expires on Tuesday.
In the past week, UN special envoy Hans Grundberg has travelled between the Yemeni port city of Aden, Oman and Riyadh for talks with Yemen’s internationally recognised government and Houthi negotiators. This week, Tim Lenderking, the US Special Envoy for Yemen, is visiting both Riyadh and Amman.
Efforts to broker a deal come at a critical time for Yemen, where the truce in its civil war – which was first announced in April and extended for two months in June – has brought much-needed respite from fighting that has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of people.
“We are at a phase now where the truce is becoming more of a commitment for both sides,” a western official with direct knowledge of the talks told Middle East Eye, on the condition of anonymity. “It’s going to be hard for either to walk away.”
‘Right now at least, the whole region is singing the same song. They want the truce’
-Western official 
The truce has led to a 60 percent drop in civilian casualties, with most now occurring as a result of landmines and unexploded ordnance, according to the UN.
The number of displaced people has been reduced by half. International flights have resumed in a limited capacity from Sanaa and fuel shipments to the Houthi-controlled port of Hodeidah have increased.
“The truce has been transformational for Yemen. It has made a tangible difference to people’s lives,” Grundberg said in a statement this month.
‘Freeze the fighting’
Yemen descended into civil war in 2014, when Iran-aligned Houthis seized the capital, Sanaa, forcing the internationally recognised government to flee to Saudi Arabia. Riyadh and a coalition of regional allies, chiefly the UAE, intervened in March 2015 to push the Houthis back.
Seven years of fighting has failed to dislodge the Houthis, who control northern Yemen and about 80 percent of the country’s population, along with major urban centres.
The fighting has led to what the UN says is the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. Millions of Yemenis are grappling with starvation and malnourishment and 80 percent of the country’s population of 29 million are dependent on aid.
Thousands of civilians have been killed by coalition air strikes, while the Houthis have been accused of errant shelling, using child soldiers and launching drones and missiles at civilian infrastructure in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Yemeni pro-government forces during fighting with Houthi rebels on the front line at Marib, the last government stronghold in northern Yemen, on 10 November 2021 (AFP)

The April truce came after some of the most bitter fighting, as the Houthis attempted to take the strategic city of Marib. The coalition held them off, and reorganised its forces to go on the offensive in Shabwah, where it dealt the Houthis a rare defeat. Analysts say the ceasefire was likely driven by these developments on the battlefield.
“The truce benefits the Houthis right now because the Marib battle exhausted them,” Maysaa Shuja Al-Deen, a senior researcher at the Sanaa Center for Strategic Studies, told MEE.
Meanwhile, Riyadh has been searching for an exit from the war. In April, Yemen’s Saudi-backed president, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi, long seen as an obstacle to peace talks, resigned. He was replaced by an eight-member presidential council, which Riyadh urged to negotiate with the Houthis.
“Yemen is a headache for Saudi Arabia. They just want to freeze the fighting and stop cross-border attacks,” Deen said, referring to the Houthis’ missile and drone strikes on the kingdom.
Shifting priorities on both sides of the conflict, even if for the short term, have led diplomats to believe they have a window of opportunity as they push for an extension of the truce from two months to six.
“Right now at least, the whole region is singing the same song. They want the truce,” the western official said.
Roads, airports and salaries
A number of obstacles could still derail talks. One of the main issues has been the Houthis’ refusal to reopen roads to the besieged city of Taiz, in southwestern Yemen, officials and analysts say.
“The government feels they have given a lot of concessions and not gotten much in return,” a second western official familiar with the government’s thinking told MEE.
Analysts say the Houthis are negotiating from a position where they believe they have the upper hand on the battlefield.
“The Houthis still harbour military aspirations, while the Saudis and Emiratis no longer have the military appetite to continue the fight, and the Houthis are well aware of that,” Mohammed al-Basha, a senior Arabian peninsula analyst at the Navanti Group, told MEE. “Yemen has entered the stalemate phase of no peace and no war,” Basha adds.
Diplomats are also trying to strike an agreement between the two sides on the payment of salaries to civil servants, to which the Houthis have asked the government to contribute in the areas they control. The potential compromise, officials tell MEE, would be to link the payment of salaries in Houthi-controlled territory with the government’s call for more transparency on the tax revenue the rebels collect at Hodeidah port.
However, burden-sharing agreements are complicated, because Yemen’s financial system is divided, with a central bank in Sanaa and one in Aden each printing its own currency.

Saudi-Hezbollah meeting secured Yemen ceasefire and Hadi resignation

“The goal is to reach in principle agreements which can be deepened and worked out technically during the next truce,” the western official told MEE.
An agreement could also be reached on expanding flights from Sanaa. While flights to Amman have resumed, Egypt has allowed only one flight to Cairo and is requesting more security checks at the airport. A list of additional destinations is being floated, which officials tell MEE contains cities in the region currently reachable from Aden airport.
Even if the two sides reach an agreement extending the truce, few predict a breakthrough on a political settlement any time soon.
“The truce has developed confidence-building measures between actors that will probably never be able to reconcile,” Raiman al-Hamdani of the Yemen Policy Center, told MEE.
The UN says each side continues to send reinforcements to the front lines. Just last month the UK intercepted what it said was a shipment of Iranian missiles in the Gulf of Oman likely destined for Yemen.
If Saudi Arabia steps back from the conflict, Yemen would still be left with a disparate mix of armed rivals, including within the coalition. Groups like the secessionist Southern Transitional Council have fought both the Houthis and the government. Al-Qaeda has also stepped up its operations in south Yemen.
“There could be a long-term truce on cross-border attacks on the Saudis, but within Yemen we still have a long way to go,” Hamdani added.

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UAE minister says youth are main tool for building sustainable future

The Arab News – www.arabnews.com

The UAE’s Minister of Culture and Youth, Noura bint Mohammed al-Kaabi. (File/AFP)

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Updated 12 August 2022

ARAB NEWS

August 12, 202213:58

DUBAI: The UAE’s Minister of Culture and Youth, Noura bint Mohammed al-Kaabi, said investing in young people, and empowering them to make a contribution to their countries and communities is the foundation of a nation’s development.
“Youth are the real capital and the main tool in our growth journey to build a sustainable future. In order to prepare them for future leadership positions, it is imperative to include them in key decision-making roles today,” she said in a statement on the occasion of the International Youth Day, marked annually on Aug. 12.
The UAE government, she said, is keen to hear the voices of young people and empower them to achieve their goals.
The National Strategy for Cultural and Creative Industries is one of the strategies which enables the UAE to invest in young talent and “helps nurture creativity and harness their energy to work towards a sustainable future,” according to state news agency WAM.
The UAE has also launched initiatives and found specialised organisations that cater to young people’s needs.
This includes establishing the Federal Youth Authority (FYA) which implements 35 youth initiatives through 15 creative youth hubs across the country to engage the young population in various sectors of society.
The minister also said that the UAE also focuses on young people from all over the world.
“This is the reason why Arab youth have chosen the UAE, for 10 consecutive years, as the best country to live and work. It goes to show that the country’s strategy in attracting and caring for creative youth and providing them with a conducive environment is bearing fruit and enhancing the capabilities of the country and youth alike,” she said.

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