Taliban supreme leader Akhundzada ready to engage with Sharia-based global community – Times of India

Kabul: Taliban Supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada On Thursday he said he was ready to engage with the international community within the Sharia framework.
A high-level gathering of about 2,500 participants, including Islamic clerics, civil society activists, Taliban officials and former Afghan government officials, was held in Kandahar, Tolo News reports.
There was no media coverage during the speech of the Supreme Leader of the Taliban.
Meanwhile, the acting minister of foreign affairs, Aamir Khan MuttakiThe Taliban has represented Afghanistan “better” around the world, Tolo News reported.
“No one should test the Afghans. Let these poor and arrogant people live happily ever after,” he said.
Muttaki said the Taliban wanted good relations with all countries, but that relations with some countries could not be expected to return to normal quickly after 20 years of war.
“Afghanistan will not be a battleground for world powers, and the soil of Afghanistan will not be used against anyone,” he said.
“There is no land in the country that is not under the control of the Islamic Emirate,” said the Deputy and Acting Minister of Virtue, Mohd Khalid Hanafi,
Abdul Samad Madani, a businessman, said, “All girls are your girls. Access to education for them is the desire of all Afghans.”
This is the second largest gathering of clerics in Kabul after the Taliban came to power.
Ever since the Taliban regime took control of Afghanistan, explosions and attacks have become a regular affair with regular human rights violations including the relentless killing of civilians, destruction of mosques and temples, attacks on women and the promotion of terror in the region. Giving is included.
The ongoing economic crisis in Kabul has created extreme poverty in the region. According to analysts, the primary reason for the increase in poverty is political change. In addition, after the Taliban regime in the country, many private businesses have stopped functioning as well affecting the country even more.
Millions of Afghans are on the verge of starvation as the country grapples with a humanitarian crisis. Afghanistan has the highest level of suffering for any country since 2005.
Other than this, United Nations The mission in Geneva said the latest report from the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) reveals a “troubling and consistent pattern of human rights violations” by the Taliban.
The United Nations Mission in Afghanistan released a report outlining the human rights situation prevailing in Afghanistan in the 10 months since the Taliban takeover.
The mission said the report highlights aspects of the Taliban’s human rights violations, but does not fully reflect the number of violations and abuses reflected in this report and the full scope for the worsening of the human rights situation since August last year .