Taliban will not allow Daesh to establish foothold in Afghanistan, says FM Muttaqi
ISLAMABAD Afghanistan’s interim Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said on Sunday that the Afghan Taliban would not allow the Daesh militant group to gain a “ base” in the country or allow any terror outfits to use Afghan soil against other nations.
Muttaqi spoke to Arab News in an interview on the sidelines of an Organization of Islamic Corporation peak held in Islamabad on Sunday to help Afghanistan, which is facing a brewing profitable meltdown and philanthropic catastrophe.
“ We’ve controlled Daesh in the total of Afghanistan and have n’t permitted anyone to use our land against any other country,” Muttaqi said. “ It’s our pledge to the whole world that Afghan soil won’t be used against anyone. We’ll not allow it.
“ We’ll not let Daesh or any other group establish a base in Afghanistan as the Afghan people want peace,” he added.
Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, earlier said during Sunday’s gathering that Afghanistan mustn’t turn into a sanctum for terrorist and revolutionist groups.
The philanthropic extremity since the Taliban seized power in August could compromise indigenous stability, Prince Faisal advised.
He said Saudi Arabia would begin transporting philanthropic aid to Afghanistan, and he hoped mechanisms could be created to deliver it to the Afghan people.
Afghanistan, which is also suffering from a banking liquidity extremity as the cash inflow dries up due to warrants, is facing the threat of profitable collapse since the Taliban took over.
But Muttaqi said there was now peace in Afghanistan and the government was strong and stable “ The people are happy,” he claimed.
Afghanistan situated billions of bones in means overseas with the US Federal Reserve and other central banks in Europe, but that plutocrat has been firmed since the Taliban ousted the Western- backed government in August.
Muttaqi pressed for the release of the billions of bones of central bank reserves as the failure-stricken nation faces a cash crunch, mass starvation and a new migration extremity.
“ The fiscal means of Afghanistan belong to the Afghan people, it isn’t our (Taliban’s) plutocrat,” the foreign minister said, prompting the US and other Western nations to allow access to the finances.
“ Why have they firmed those means and created problems for the Afghan people? Not indeed one Afghan person who’s working abroad can shoot their hard- earned plutocrat back to their country. Is this an illustration of respect for mortal rights?”
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