logo
Russia becomes first country to recognise Taliban govt

Russia becomes first country to recognise Taliban govt

KABUL: Afghanistan's government said on Thursday that Russia had become the first country to officially recognise its rule, calling it a "brave decision."
The Taliban swept back to power in 2021 after ousting the foreign-backed government and have imposed an austere version of Islamic law.
They have keenly sought official international recognition and investment, as the country recovers from four decades of war, including the Soviet invasion from 1979 to 1989.
The announcement was made after Afghanistan's Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi met with Russia's ambassador to Afghanistan, Dmitry Zhirnov, in Kabul on Thursday.
"This brave decision will be an example for others... Now that the process of recognition has started, Russia was ahead of everyone," Muttaqi said in a video of the meeting on X.
"Russia is the first country which has officially recognised the Islamic Emirate," Taliban foreign ministry spokesman Zia Ahmad Takal told AFP, using the government's name for their administration.
Muttaqi said it was "a new phase of positive relations, mutual respect, and constructive engagement", the foreign ministry posted on X.
Russia's foreign ministry added on Telegram: "We believe that the act of official recognition of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will boost the development of productive bilateral cooperation between our countries in several areas."
It highlighted potential "commercial and economic" cooperation in "energy, transportation, agriculture and infrastructure."
The ministry said that Moscow hoped to continue helping Kabul "reinforce regional security and fight against the threats of terrorism and drug-trafficking."
Moscow has taken recent steps to normalise relations with the Taliban authorities, removing them from a list of "terrorist organisations" in April and accepting a Taliban ambassador in Kabul.
In July 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin called the Taliban "allies in the fight against terrorism."
Russia was the first country to open a business representative office in Kabul after the Taliban takeover, and has announced plans to use Afghanistan as a transit hub for gas heading to Southeast Asia.
Only Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates recognised the Taliban during their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001.
This time, multiple other states, including China and Pakistan, have accepted Taliban ambassadors in their capitals, but have not officially recognised the Islamic Emirate since the end of the then-insurgency's two-decade war with US-led Nato troops.
There has been limited but growing engagement with the Taliban authorities, particularly from regional neighbours, but also major global players China and Russia.
However, restrictions on women and girls, barring them from education and squeezing them from public life, have been key sticking points for Western nations.
Multiple Afghan women activists were quick to condemn Russia's recognition.
The move "legitimises a regime that bans girls from education, enforces public floggings, and shelters UN-sanctioned terrorists", said Mariam Solaimankhil, former member of Afghanistan's parliament.
"The move signals that strategic interests will always outweigh human rights and international law."
Senior Taliban figures remain under international sanctions, including by the United Nations.
Another former MP in Kabul, Fawzia Koofi, said any recognition of the Taliban "will not bring peace it will legitimise impunity" and "risk endangering not just the people of Afghanistan, but global security."--AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TikTok Shop emerging as growth driver for Malaysian SMEs through ‘shoppertainment'
TikTok Shop emerging as growth driver for Malaysian SMEs through ‘shoppertainment'

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

TikTok Shop emerging as growth driver for Malaysian SMEs through ‘shoppertainment'

PETALING JAYA: TikTok Shop is emerging as the growth driver for Malaysian small and medium enterprises through its social media engagement and e-commerce combination known as 'shoppertainment'. For local creators interviewed by SunBiz, the platform has become a game changer. Pinn Yang, for example, said TikTok Shop finally bridged the gap between content discovery and actual sales conversion. 'Before this, even with our strong following, there was no direct way to turn discovery into purchase. With TikTok Shop, we closed that gap,' he said. His team grew from experimenting with live selling to generating over RM3.8 million in sales during the Yang Riang Raya campaign within a year. The secret, he said, lies not just in using the platform, but in the speed of testing, feedback and adaptation. 'People think you need a big audience or fancy equipment. But when we started, it was just me, a phone and a ring light. What really matters is consistency and truly understanding what your audience wants.' For Puspa Gomen, TikTok Shop transformed her brand by simplifying the buying process and expanding reach. 'Some of my TikTok videos reached up to eight million views, and in just three months, I made almost half a million in sales,' she shared. She added live streams allow buyers to see products in action, ask questions and build trust in real time which are crucial for driving repeat purchases. Eira Syazira, founder of Candyta, echoed the sentiments, calling TikTok Shop a game changer that enabled rapid scaling far beyond traditional retail. In just six months, Candyta saw sales surge, with 35% now coming from returning customers and its follower count multiplying fivefold. Meanwhile, Nabilah Nazib of Sugardoll described TikTok Shop as a pivotal shift from a labour-intensive, agent-based system to a direct-to-consumer model. 'Previously, our revenue relied on manual order-taking. Now, sales are driven by content, not manpower. Stock sells out in hours after a viral live,' she said. Beyond reduced acquisition costs and faster sellouts, she noted that genuine, problem-solving content matters more than follower count. 'This proves that today, scaling a brand is less about team size and more about being visible, relatable, and consistent.' Syeikh Omar Sadeq, another creator, saw sales jump two to three times after joining TikTok Shop. 'Short videos help build community, while live sessions let us explain products and connect directly. Many customers return because they feel more confident after watching our lives,' he said. Contrary to popular belief, creators said TikTok Shop isn't just for young shoppers or cheap products. Premium offerings can succeed too if the story, authenticity and community connection are strong. The latest data on TikTok Shop's global gross merchandise value (GMV) shows that consumers in Malaysia spent a whopping US$2.724 billion (about RM12.07 billion) in 2024. According to TikTok Shop's GMV in Malaysia grew 104% year-on-year from US$1.3 billion in 2023, making Malaysia one of the platform's top six markets globally. TikTok Shop is not just expanding rapidly, it is outpacing traditional giants in percentage growth and positioning itself as the second-largest platform in the market. Data from showed Shopee is leading the Malaysian market with US$7.24 billion in GMV for 2024, followed by TikTok Shop and Taobao. However, Tik-Tok Shop is leading the surge in live and video commerce in Southeast Asia, where players like Shopee and Lazada are playing catch-up.

Lula condemns Israel's actions in Gaza as 'genocide' at BRICS summit
Lula condemns Israel's actions in Gaza as 'genocide' at BRICS summit

New Straits Times

time9 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Lula condemns Israel's actions in Gaza as 'genocide' at BRICS summit

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazil's president insisted the world must act to stop what he described as an Israeli "genocide" in Gaza, as leaders from 11 emerging BRICS nations gathered in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday. "We cannot remain indifferent to the genocide carried out by Israel in Gaza, the indiscriminate killing of innocent civilians and the use of hunger as a weapon of war," President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva told leaders from China, India, and other nations. His comments came as Gaza truce talks between Israel and Hamas resumed in Doha, and as pressure mounted to end the 22-month war, which began with Hamas's Oct 7, 2023, attacks. Lula said Sunday that "absolutely nothing could justify the actions" of Hamas on that day – which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly Israeli civilians. But he also offered fierce criticism of Israel's subsequent actions. Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed at least 57,418 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The United Nations considers the figures reliable. The BRICS gathering includes Israel's arch foe Iran, but also nations like Russia, which have close ties with the country. BRICS countries have been in disagreement over how strongly to denounce Israel's bombing of Iran and its actions in Gaza. But one diplomatic source said the text would give the "same message" that BRICS delivered last month. Then Iran's allies expressed "grave concern" about strikes against Iran, but did not explicitly mention Israel or the United States. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is due to visit the White House on Monday for talks with US President Donald Trump, who is pushing to end the war and has said he hopes for a ceasefire deal in the coming week.--AFP

US' long-term debt problems may get worse
US' long-term debt problems may get worse

New Straits Times

time9 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

US' long-term debt problems may get worse

President Donald Trump's tax-cut and spending bill, which passed Congress on Thursday, averts the near-term prospect of a United States government default but makes America's long-term debt problems even worse. Republican lawmakers in the House of Representatives approved the bill that will extend Trump's 2017 tax cuts, authorise more spending on border security and the military, make steep cuts in Medicare and Medicaid – and add trillions to the government's debt. Trump signed the bill into law on July 4. As part of the tax package, lawmakers raised the government's US$36.1 trillion borrowing limit that it was projected to hit later this summer by US$5 trillion — a move that will assuage concerns over a possible default on US debt. Analysts had estimated the so-called X-date, when the Treasury would no longer be able to pay all of its obligations without an increase or suspension of the debt limit, could have occurred at the end of August or in early September. Longer term, however, the bill has largely been seen as bad news for the US bond market and the nation's fiscal health. It will add US$3.4 trillion to the nation's debt over the next decade, nonpartisan analysts have estimated. That would exacerbate concerns about additional bond supply and dwindling demand for US Treasuries that have been a key driver of financial markets in recent months. "The bill contributes to some of the structural concerns around Treasuries, with respect to, No. 1, fiscal deficit and elevated debt levels, and No. 2, inflation," said Mike Medeiros, macro strategist at Wellington Management. BlackRock said last Monday that foreign buyers were already souring on American debt. There was a real risk that demand for the US$500 billion in debt the US issues every week will fall even more and push borrowing costs higher. The bill is projected to reduce tax revenues by US$4.5 trillion, reduce spending by US$1.2 trillion and cost 10.9 million people their federal health insurance over the next decade, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office. The legislation also stokes economic growth by allowing businesses to fully expense equipment purchases as well as research and development costs, and provides other tax breaks. Some investors, however, worry the debt overhang could curtail the economic stimulus in the bill, which Trump refers to as the "One Big Beautiful Bill". "We believe the One Big Beautiful Bill will accelerate corporate earnings growth, which ultimately will drive equity values," said Ellen Hazen, chief market strategist at F.L. Putnam Investment Management. "But this could lead to higher-for-longer Treasury rates, making many fixed-income investments somewhat less attractive over the longer term," she said. Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields were higher on Wednesday after days of decline. By raising the US federal borrowing limits, the bill removes the low-probability but high-impact risk of a US debt default, which could have catastrophic consequences for global markets. In recent weeks, the interest rate on some Treasury debt due in August had risen more than yields of short-term Treasury bills coming due around the same time, a sign investors were getting nervous about the approaching X-date.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store