For the first time ever, Taliban reps were invited to the big U.N. climate conference

For the first time ever, Taliban reps were invited to the big U.N. climate conference

Read Time:1 Minute, 24 Second

For the first time since the Taliban takeover in 2021, a delegation from Afghanistan has been invited to the United Nations signature climate conference: the 29th Conference of Parties (COP).

Following U.N. protocol, this year’s host nation — Azerbaijan — issued the invite.

It’s not a full-blown invitation. Because the U.N. does not recognize the Taliban as the official government of Afghanistan due to its repressive policies, the Afghan delegates — members of the National Environmental Protection Agency (NEPA — cannot participate in decision-making events.

Nonetheless, the Taliban has said it is eager to participate. “The Afghan delegation will discuss strengthening international cooperation in the field of environmental protection and climate change,” stated a Taliban press release prior to the U.N. event.

Afghan climate scientists and activists, even those critical of the Taliban, welcome this development. “I consider it a very important move because it paves the path to the negotiation with climate change funds, which halted their [Afghan] projects in the past three years,” says Assem Mayar, a water resources expert and former lecturer at Kabul Polytechnic University.

“Afghanistan is not officially in the agenda, but having NEPA delegates as observers makes a difference,” says Abdulhadi Achakzai, a climate activist with a Kabul-based environmental nonprofit who participated in the summit as an observer.

“Their participation initiates a trust-building effort between international stakeholders,” he says, which is imperative if the world “is committed to combating the climate crisis.”

A hard-hit country

Afghanistan is among the countries worst impacted by climate change, according to the U.N.; droughts and extreme temperatures have displaced hundreds of thousands of people in recent years.

Read full article on NPR

About Post Author

Ruchi

I am an Indian journalist based in Kabul for nearly three years now. I primarily covering post-conflict, developmental and cultural stories from the region, and sometimes report on the ongoing conflict as well.
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