Taliban bars UN human rights special rapporteur from Afghanistan
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[August 21, 2024]
KABUL (Reuters) -The Taliban have barred United
Nations-appointed special rapporteur Richard Bennett from entering
Afghanistan, the administration's spokesperson told local broadcaster
Tolo, accusing the human rights watchdog of "spreading propaganda".
Bennett was appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council in 2022
to monitor Afghanistan's human rights situation after the Taliban took
over the previous year.
Bennett, who has previously said the Taliban's treatment of women and
girls could amount to a crime against humanity, is based outside
Afghanistan but has visited several times to research the situation.
The U.N. Human Rights Council did not immediately respond to request for
comment. Bennett could not immediately be reached for comment.
The Taliban administration's foreign ministry spokesperson Abdul Qahar
Balkhi told Reuters Bennett "had been unable to acquire a travel visa to
Afghanistan".
"Even after repeatedly requesting Mr. Bennett to adhere to
professionalism during work ... it was decided that ... his reports are
based on prejudices and anecdotes detrimental to interests of
Afghanistan and the Afghan people," Balkhi said.
Taliban administration spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid has previously
said the Taliban respect women's rights in accordance with its
interpretation of Islamic law and local customs. He told Tolo that
Bennett would not be allowed to come to Afghanistan, a rare public
barring of an individual foreign official.
"Mr. Bennett's travel to Afghanistan has been prohibited because he was
assigned to spread propaganda in Afghanistan... He used to exaggerate
minor issues and propagate them," Mujahid said, according to Tolo.
Three years into their rule after foreign forces withdrew, the Taliban
have not been formally recognized by any foreign government.
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Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan,
Richard Bennett, gestures during a news conference in Kabul,
Afghanistan, May 26, 2022. REUTERS/Ali Khara/File Photo
Foreign officials, including Washington, have said the path towards
recognition is stuck until the Taliban changes course on women's
rights, having barred most girls over the age of 12 from schools and
universities, banning women from parks, and stopping most
long-distance travel by women without a male guardian.
Afghanistan's central bank assets have been frozen and many senior
Taliban officials are subject to U.N. travel restrictions that
require them to seek exemptions to enter other countries.
The U.N. has been trying to find a unified international approach to
dealing with the Taliban. In June, top U.N. officials and envoys
from up to 25 countries met the Taliban in Qatar, receiving
criticism from human rights groups for not including Afghan women
and civil society representatives at the meeting.
The U.N. mission to Afghanistan also operates from Kabul and
monitors and reports on human rights issues.
(Reporting by Mohammad Yunus Yawar in Kabul and Charlotte Greenfield
in Islamabad; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Christopher Cushing)
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