Afghanistan attends U.N. climate talks for first time since Taliban
return to power
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[November 12, 2024]
By SIBI ARASU
BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) — For the first time since the Taliban returned to
power in 2021, Afghanistan on Monday sent a delegation to the United
Nations climate talks in a bid to garner help in dealing with global
warming.
Matuil Haq Khalis, who's head of the country’s environment protection
agency, told The Associated Press that Afghanistan needs international
support to deal with extreme weather like erratic rainfall, prolonged
droughts and flash floods.
“All the countries must join hands and tackle the problem of climate
change,” said Khalis, speaking through a translator at the talks, taking
place this year in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Afghanistan has been hard hit by climate change, with a recent
assessment by climate experts ranking it the sixth most climate
vulnerable country in the world.
In March, northern Afghanistan experienced heavy rains resulting in
flash floods, killing over 300 people. Climate scientists have found
that extreme rainfall has gotten 25% heavier over the last 40 years in
the country.
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Khalis said Afghanistan has prepared national action plans to deal with
climate change and will be updating its climate goals within the next
few months. He said the country has great potential for wind and solar
power but needs international to develop it.
He added that the Afghan delegation was grateful to the Azerbaijani
government for inviting them. The delegation will have an observer
status at the talks, as the Taliban do not have official recognition as
the government of Afghanistan.
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Matiul Haq Khalis, head of the National Environmental Protection
Agency from Afghanistan, speaks to members of the media at the COP29
U.N. Climate Summit, Monday, Nov. 11, 2024, in Baku, Azerbaijan. (AP
Photo/Peter Dejong)
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Joanna Depledge, a climate historian at the University of Cambridge
in England, said Afghanistan should be able to attend.
“By virtue of being a global forum, there are a whole host of
politically unsavoury states with all kinds of appalling records of
one sort or another that attend. Where would we draw the line?” she
said.
Responding to a question about the U.N. assessment that women are
more vulnerable than men to climate impacts, Khalis said that
“climate change impact doesn't have any boundaries, it can have its
impact on women, children, men, plants or animals, so it requires
collective work to tackle this issue.”
Khalis said he has requested bilateral talks with a range of
countries, including the United States and would be happy to sit
down with them if the request is accepted.
“We were not part of the last three conferences ... but we are happy
that this time we are here and we will be able to deliver the
message of Afghan people with the international community,” said
Khalis.
___
Associated Press journalists Olivia Zhang, Peter Dejong, Aleksandar
Furtula, Seth Borenstein and Joshua A. Bickel contributed to this
report.
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