logo
Afghans both hopeful, disappointed after Russia's Taliban recognition

Afghans both hopeful, disappointed after Russia's Taliban recognition

Yahooa day ago
Russia's decision to formally recognise the Taliban government has been seen as an opening for a stronger economy by some Afghans, while others were sceptical that it would improve their lot.
Russia became the first country to acknowledge the Taliban authorities on Thursday, after a gradual building of ties that included removing their "terrorist organisation" designation and accepting an ambassador in recent months.
The Taliban authorities had not been recognised by any state in the nearly four years since sweeping to power in 2021, ousting the foreign-backed government as US-led troops withdrew after a two-decade war.
Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world and in a fragile recovery from four decades of conflict.
"With the current situation in Afghanistan, with all the challenges, everyone is worried. If the world recognises Afghanistan, we will be happy, currently, even the tiniest thing matters," Gul Mohammad, 58, said on Friday in the capital Kabul.
Despite having bitter memories of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, when he "lost everything" and became a refugee in Pakistan, he acknowledges that "the priorities are different now".
Jamaluddin Sayar, 67, predicted that "trade and economic prosperity will now blossom".
The retired pilot said other countries, "both western and eastern", should recognise the government and "stop spreading propaganda against the Islamic Emirate", using the Taliban authorities' name for their administration.
- Won't 'lead to anything' -
Russian and Afghan officials praised the move as an opening for deeper cooperation, notably in economic and security arenas.
Security concerns have been a key avenue for coordination between the Taliban authorities and the international community, amid fears Afghanistan would become fertile ground for increased militant activity.
The authorities have prioritised security and made repeated assurances that Afghan soil would not be used by any group to plan attacks on other nations.
However, Pakistan's ties with the Taliban authorities have been strained over a surge in militant activity since their takeover and last year, an attack claimed by the Islamic State group's branch in Afghanistan killed 137 people in a Moscow concert hall.
In a country where dissent and protest is tightly controlled, some Kabul residents were afraid to openly criticise the Taliban authorities.
Atef, not his real name, was unconvinced better relations between Afghanistan and Russia would improve the livelihoods of ordinary Afghans.
"I think Afghanistan will fall into the traps of the Russians again, the issues and challenges will increase, and there is nothing that can help ordinary people," the unemployed 25-year-old said.
"People are struggling, and they will still struggle with or without the recognition."
For Afghan women's rights activists, particularly those who have advocated for isolating the Taliban government, the recognition was seen as a setback that "legitimises" restrictions on women.
The Taliban authorities, who also ruled the country between 1996 and 2001, have again imposed an austere version of Islamic law.
Norway-based Afghan women's rights activist Hoda Khamosh was defiant against the impact of the Russian move.
"Human rights organisations right now are trying to recognise gender apartheid in Afghanistan because the Taliban are a repressive regime against women," she said.
"Therefore, these recognitions will not lead to anything."
qb/sw/jfx/mtp
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russian strikes kill four people in Ukraine's Donetsk
Russian strikes kill four people in Ukraine's Donetsk

Miami Herald

time37 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Russian strikes kill four people in Ukraine's Donetsk

MOSCOW - At least four people have been killed in Russian glide bomb and drone attacks in the eastern Ukrainian Donetsk region, authorities said on Sunday. In the industrial city of Kostiantynivka, two civilians died when a bomb was dropped on a construction site, the Donetsk regional prosecutor's office said. Ten minutes later, a drone hit a car in which a married couple was sitting. The authorities published photos on Telegram showing the 39-year-old woman and her 40-year-old husband who were killed. Some 15 residential buildings and power lines were damaged in the attacks, authorities said. Ukrainian air defenses had already recorded more than 160 drone and missile attacks in the country on Sunday morning, with police saying an 8-year-old boy died when a drone hit a car in the north-eastern region of Kharkiv. A 4-year-old boy and a 40-year-old man were also injured in the attack. _____ Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Netanyahu vows to ‘expand circle of peace,' push for elimination of Hamas ahead of Trump meeting
Netanyahu vows to ‘expand circle of peace,' push for elimination of Hamas ahead of Trump meeting

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Netanyahu vows to ‘expand circle of peace,' push for elimination of Hamas ahead of Trump meeting

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he has a key opportunity to 'expand the circle of peace' in the Middle East and vowed to eliminate Hamas as he heads to Washington to meet with President Trump. Before boarding the US-bound plane on Sunday, Netanyahu said he and Trump can secure big changes to the region — while also insisting that Israel will not agree to a cease-fire deal that includes Hamas' continued existence in Gaza, the Times of Israel reported. 'We are determined to ensure that Gaza will no longer constitute a threat to Israel,' he told reporters. 'That means, we will not allow a situation that encourages more kidnappings, more murders, more executions, more invasions.' 4 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is flying to Washington, DC, on Sunday to meet with President Trump. POOL/AFP via Getty Images 4 The prime minister is facing daily protests as Israelis call for him to accept a cease-fire deal with Hamas to secure the freedom of the remaining hostages. REUTERS 'That means one thing: eliminating Hamas's military and governing capabilities. Hamas will not be there,' he added. That remains a massive sticking point in ending the war in Gaza. Previous cease-fire proposals fell apart after Israel and Hamas failed to reach a compromise on how the war should end, with the Jewish state rejecting any deal that saw the de facto governors of the Gaza Strip stay. Netanyahu said his delegation, which is traveling to Qatar to meet with mediators, have been instructed to reach a deal under those terms again. Netanyahu maintains that the Israeli military should occupy Gaza indefinitely, with the role of governors transferred to local officials without any known ties to Hamas or the Palestinian Authority, which governs the West Bank. 4 Netanyahu said he was certain President Trump would help secure the type of cease-fire deal Israel is seeking, which would see Hamas eliminated from the Gaza Strip. Getty Images 4 Smoke billows over the Gaza strip following another round of Israeli airstrikes on Sunday. AFP via Getty Images The last truce fell apart in March after Israel opted out of discussions for a permanent end to the war, with Hamas reiterating that it would not agree to demilitarize as a condition for peace. Netanyahu appeared confident that he could 'advance' his ideal outcome in his looming meeting with Trump, touting that the two have already achieved so much following the 12-day war with Iran, which saw Israel and the US bomb Tehran's nuclear facilities. 'We have already transformed the Middle East beyond recognition, and we now have a chance to bring a great future to the state of Israel, the people of Israel and the entire Middle East,' Netanyahu said. The current deal being discussed in Doha calls for a 60-day cease-fire in which Hamas would agree to free 10 living hostages, as well as the bodies of 18 captives. Hamas currently holds 50 hostages after 639 days of war, only 20 of whom are believed to still be alive, according to Israeli officials.

BRICS summit opens in Brazil, overshadowed by Trump's tariff policies and Middle East tensions
BRICS summit opens in Brazil, overshadowed by Trump's tariff policies and Middle East tensions

CNBC

timean hour ago

  • CNBC

BRICS summit opens in Brazil, overshadowed by Trump's tariff policies and Middle East tensions

The BRICS bloc of developing nations on Sunday condemned the increase of tariffs and attacks on Iran, but refrained from naming U.S. President Donald Trump. The group's declaration, which also took aim at Israel's military actions in the Middle East, mentioned war-torn Ukraine just once. China's President Xi Jinping did not attend a BRICS summit for the first time since he became his country's leader in 2012. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who will make an appearance via videoconference, continues to mostly avoid traveling abroad due to an international arrest warrant issued after Russia invaded Ukraine. The group's declaration raised "serious concerns" about the rise of tariffs, which it said were "inconsistent with WTO (World Trade Organization) rules," the document says. The group added that those restrictions "threaten to reduce global trade, disrupt global supply chains, and introduce uncertainty." Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva criticized NATO's decision to hike military spending by 5% of GDP annually by 2035. That sentiment was later echoed in the group's declaration. "It is always easier to invest in war than in peace," Lula said at the opening of the summit. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, who was expected to attend the summit before the attacks on his country in June, sent his foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, to the meeting in Rio. Araghchi told leaders he had pushed for every member of the United Nations to condemn Israel's strikes strongly, which he called an "invasion," state media reported. He added that Israel and the U.S. should be accountable for rights violations. The Iranian foreign minister said the aftermath of the war "will not be limited" to one country. "The entire region and beyond will be damaged," he said. The restraint in Rio de Janeiro marks a departure from last year's summit hosted by Russia in Kazan, when the Kremlin sought to develop alternatives to U.S.-dominated payment systems which would allow it to dodge Western sanctions imposed after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. "We recall our national positions concerning the conflict in Ukraine as expressed in the appropriate fora, including the UN Security Council and the UN General Assembly," the group said in its final declaration. João Alfredo Nyegray, an international business and geopolitics professor at the Pontifical Catholic University in Parana, said the summit could have played a role in showing an alternative to an unstable world, but it won't do so. "The withdrawal of Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and the uncertainty about the level of representation for countries like Iran, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are confirming the difficulty for the BRICS to establish themselves as a cohesive pole of global leadership," Nyegray said. "This moment demands high-level articulation, but we are actually seeing dispersion." Brazil, the country that chairs the bloc, has picked six strategic priorities for the summit: global cooperation in healthcare; trade, investment and finance; climate change; governance for artificial intelligence; peace-making and security; and institutional development. It has decided to focus on less controversial issues, such as promoting trade relations between members and global health, after Trump returned to the White House, said Ana Garcia, a professor at the Rio de Janeiro Federal Rural University. "Brazil wants the least amount of damage possible and to avoid drawing the attention of the Trump administration to prevent any type of risk to the Brazilian economy," Garcia said. While Brazil advocated on Sunday for reforming Western-led global institutions, a cornerstone policy of the group, the country's government wants to avoid becoming the target of tariffs — a predicament it has largely escaped so far. Trump has threatened to impose 100% tariffs against the bloc if it takes any steps to undermine the dollar. BRICS was founded by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, but the group last year expanded to include Indonesia, Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, and the United Arab Emirates. As well as new members, the bloc has 10 strategic partner countries, a category created at last year's summit that includes Belarus, Cuba and Vietnam. That rapid expansion led Brazil to put housekeeping issues — officially termed institutional development — on the agenda to better integrate new members and boost internal cohesion. Despite notable absences, the summit is important for attendees, especially in the context of instability provoked by Trump's tariff wars, said Bruce Scheidl, a researcher at the University of São Paulo's BRICS study group. "The summit offers the best opportunity for emerging countries to respond, in the sense of seeking alternatives and diversifying their economic partnerships," Scheidl said. Earlier on Sunday, a pro-Israel non-profit organization placed dozens of rainbow flags on Ipanema beach to protest Iran's policies regarding LGBT+ people. On Saturday, human rights group Amnesty International protested Brazil's plans for offshore oil drilling near the mouth of the Amazon River. For Lula, the summit is a welcome respite from a challenging domestic scenario, marked by a decline in popularity and conflict with Congress. The meeting also provided an opportunity to advance climate negotiations and commitments on environmental protection ahead of November's COP 30 climate talks in the Amazonian city of Belém.

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