United Nations: Russia will interact with the Taliban "irrespective of the evolving situation and their specific actions" in Afghanistan, Moscow's envoy to the UN said on Monday, asserting that the militant group has already sought to bring public order and confirmed security guarantees for civilians and for the foreign diplomatic mission staff. "According to our report, the Taliban has already sought to bring public order and have also confirmed security guarantees for civilians and for the foreign diplomatic mission staff," Russia's Permanent Representative Vassily Nebenzia told the UN Security Council meeting on Afghanistan, convened for the second time in just over 10 days under India's current UNSC Presidency for August.
"We trust that in the current circumstances, the security of diplomatic staff and the UN presence in Afghanistan will be insured and their institutions will enjoy immunity," he said. "As regards our future official steps, official steps regarding the Taliban, we will interact with them, irrespective of the evolving situation, and their specific actions," Nebenzia said. The brutal war in Afghanistan reached a watershed moment on Sunday when the Taliban insurgents closed in on Kabul before entering the city and taking over the presidential palace, forcing embattled President Ashraf Ghani to join fellow citizens and foreigners to flee the country. The Russian envoy, however, voiced concern by the ongoing presence of terrorist threats in Afghanistan, including ISIL-K (Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Khorasan Province) whose "terrorist activities are likely to spill across Afghanistan's borders and thus will threaten the security of neighbouring countries in Central Asia."
Terrorism is inextricably linked to the drugs problem. The deteriorating situation in Afghanistan over recent months has led to a sharp worsening in the humanitarian situation, he said, adding that the numerous reports about the number of internally displaced persons and the flows of refugees across the country's border are of concern. It creates an additional burden for neighbouring states, including Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Iran and Pakistan. Not to mention the risk of fighters infiltrating the region inter-alia by pretending to be refugees. He said Moscow is in regular contact with all five Central Asian countries, both bilaterally and through regional organisations such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. "We still want to see a peaceful settlement in Afghanistan, and the subsequent stabilisation of the country and its post conflict recovery. We're convinced that an end to the years-long, bloody war and having national reconciliation would benefit all the people of Afghanistan, its regional neighbours, and the world as a whole," he said.
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