Italian Foreign Affairs Minister Luigi Di Maio has said the Taliban government in Afghanistan couldn’t be recognised but said Afghans should start entering the fiscal support that was firmed after the fortified group took power last month.
He prompted foreign governments to help a fiscal collapse there that would affect in a massive inflow of settlers.
Recognition of the Taliban government is insolvable since there are 17 terrorists among the ministers, and the mortal rights of women and girls are continuously violated,” Di Maio told state- possessed TV Rai 3 on Sunday.
Easily, we must help Afghanistan from implosion and from an unbridled inflow of migration that could destabilise neighbouring countries,” Di Mai
.Italy holds the periodic, rotating administration of the G20 and is looking to host a special peak on Afghanistan.
The G20 countries, together with Afghanistan’s neighbours, are committed to fight against terrorism, and to work for the protection of mortal rights, Di Maio added.
On Friday, the United States Treasury Department said it issued two general licences, one allowing the US government, NGOs and certain transnational organisations, including the United Nations, to engage in deals with the Taliban or Haqqani Network – both under warrants – that are necessary to give philanthropic backing.
The Taliban seized control of the country last month as foreign forces confederated with the US withdrew from Afghanistan after a 20- time war. The events crowned in the prisoner of the capital, Kabul, on August 15, two decades after the Taliban was driven from power by a US- led crusade following the September 11 attacks on the United States.
The UN said that at the launch of the time more than 18 million people – about half of Afghanistan’s population – bear aid amid the country’s alternate failure in four times.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said last week that Afghanistan is on “ the verge of a dramatic philanthropic disaster” and has decided to engage with the Taliban in order to help the country’s people.