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UN eases curbs on Taliban leaders | UN eases curbs on Taliban leaders |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The United Nations has removed five former Afghan Taliban officials from its sanctions list which was imposed because of alleged links to al-Qaeda. | The United Nations has removed five former Afghan Taliban officials from its sanctions list which was imposed because of alleged links to al-Qaeda. |
The UN said the five would no longer be subject to international travel bans and a freeze on their assets. | The UN said the five would no longer be subject to international travel bans and a freeze on their assets. |
Separately, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said a fixed date to pull troops from Afghanistan would be a mistake. | |
She was speaking with Afghan President Hamid Karzai ahead of Thursday's London conference on Afghanistan. | |
The UN Security Council sanctions panel "approved the deletion (de-listing) of the five entries" from its blacklist of individuals subjected to a travel ban, assets freeze and arms embargo, the UN said in a statement. | |
The five men are former members of the Taliban government, and were put on the UN blacklist in 2001. | The five men are former members of the Taliban government, and were put on the UN blacklist in 2001. |
This step is not sufficient, the UN should have removed a noticeable number of the Taliban names from the blacklist so a positive step would be taken to end [the] war in Afghanistan Abdul Wakil MutawakilFormer Taliban foreign minister Moving from war to peace Who are the Taliban? | |
They were not active insurgents and there had already been debate within the UN sanctions committee on whether to remove them from the list. | They were not active insurgents and there had already been debate within the UN sanctions committee on whether to remove them from the list. |
The men include Abdul Wakil Mutawakil, who was a foreign minister when the Taliban were in power in Afghanistan. | |
| The others are: |
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Mr Mutawakil said the move was a good start but did not go far enough. | |
"I consider it as restoration of my human rights," the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press quoted him as saying. | |
"This step is not sufficient, the UN should have removed a noticeable number of the Taliban names from the blacklist so a positive step would be taken to end [the] war in Afghanistan." | |
There are more than 140 names of suspected Taliban members with alleged links to al-Qaeda on the UN sanctions list. | |
'Militarised aid' | |
Support has been growing for the notion of reconciliation with elements of the Taliban. | |
President Karzai is hoping to gain support at the London conference for a plan to offer low- and medium-level Taliban fighters money, jobs and support to lay down their weapons. | |
Afghan President Karzai told the BBC last week of his desire for reconciliation | |
Representatives of 60 nations are gathering in the UK capital to discuss strengthening Afghanistan's army and to push Mr Karzai to increase efforts to fight corruption. | |
Speaking in Berlin after discussions with Mr Karzai, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel said she agreed with his goal of having Afghan troops fully responsible for security in Afghanistan by 2014. | |
But she said it would be a mistake to set a fixed date for the withdrawal of German troops from the country because it would encourage the Taliban. | |
"We don't want to give the Taliban an excuse to go quiet and then launch a big attack," she said. | |
On Tuesday, she said she planned to send 500 more troops to join the 4,300 already there. The extra deployment is subject to parliamentary approval. | |
Germany's forces in Afghanistan are the third largest foreign contingent | |
She also said Berlin would put 50m euros ($70m; £44m) into an international fund to win over more moderate insurgents, and increase its development aid to 430m euros per year - nearly double the current level. | |
Meanwhile, a group of aid agencies with long experience of operating in Afghanistan has warned of a danger of growing militarisation of the aid effort there. | |
The eight agencies, including Oxfam and Christian Aid, said the pressure to achieve quick results had led to aid going through the international forces in Afghanistan rather than civilian channels. | |
Their report said foreign military projects designed to win the hearts and minds of the Afghan population were often inappropriate and exposed civilians to Taliban attacks. |