NEW YORK, Jan 27 : The United Nations said early Wednesday that a Security Council committee removed five former senior Taliban officials from its sanctions list, something Afghan President Hamid Karzai has been pushing for.
All five were high-ranking members of the former Taliban government. Four were listed as former foreign minister Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil, former deputy minister of commerce Fazal Mohammad, former Taliban press officer Shams-us-Safa Aminzai and former deputy minister of planning Mohammad Musa Hottak.
It said the fifth, former deputy minister of frontier affairs Abdul Hakim, had renounced the Taliban three years ago and was now a governor of Uruzgan province. It did elaborate on the status of the others.
All five were put on the U.N. blacklist in 2001.
There was nothing in the statement that indicated the five had recently been involved in the insurgency against the government and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
The United Nations said in a statement that the decision was made on Monday on the basis of a review of the original listings and the five would no longer be subject to international travel bans and asset freezes.
The decision came before a 60-nation conference in London on Thursday to set a framework for handing security over to Afghan forces.
NATO powers are expected to back Karzai's plan to reach out to Taliban insurgents. Removal from the UN Taliban and al-Qaeda sanctions list is among the incentives under discussion.
All five were high-ranking members of the former Taliban government. Four were listed as former foreign minister Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil, former deputy minister of commerce Fazal Mohammad, former Taliban press officer Shams-us-Safa Aminzai and former deputy minister of planning Mohammad Musa Hottak.
It said the fifth, former deputy minister of frontier affairs Abdul Hakim, had renounced the Taliban three years ago and was now a governor of Uruzgan province. It did elaborate on the status of the others.
All five were put on the U.N. blacklist in 2001.
There was nothing in the statement that indicated the five had recently been involved in the insurgency against the government and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
The United Nations said in a statement that the decision was made on Monday on the basis of a review of the original listings and the five would no longer be subject to international travel bans and asset freezes.
The decision came before a 60-nation conference in London on Thursday to set a framework for handing security over to Afghan forces.
NATO powers are expected to back Karzai's plan to reach out to Taliban insurgents. Removal from the UN Taliban and al-Qaeda sanctions list is among the incentives under discussion.
No comments:
Post a Comment