Afghanistan envoy withdraws from General Assembly debate: UN

Published September 27, 2021
In this file photo, Permanent Representative of Afghanistan to the United Nations\ Ghulam Isaczai speaks during a UN Security Council meeting on Afghanistan on August 16 at the United Nations in New York. — AFP
In this file photo, Permanent Representative of Afghanistan to the United Nations\ Ghulam Isaczai speaks during a UN Security Council meeting on Afghanistan on August 16 at the United Nations in New York. — AFP

Afghanistan's ambassador to the United Nations pulled out of delivering an address to world leaders at the General Assembly later on Monday, a UN spokesperson said.

Ghulam Isaczai, who represented president Ashraf Ghani's regime that was ousted last month, had been due to defy the Taliban with a speech but his name was removed from the list of speakers early on Monday.

“The country withdraws its participation in the general debate,” Monica Grayley, a spokeswoman for the assembly's president, confirmed to AFP.

She added that Afghanistan's mission to the UN had not cited a reason for the withdrawal.

Read: UN, Afghanistan’s Taliban figuring out how to interact

The Taliban wrote a letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres last week requesting that its new foreign minister, Amir Khan Muttaqi, be allowed to “participate”. The letter insisted that Isaczai “no longer represents” Afghanistan at the global body.

The letter said that the Taliban had nominated their Doha-based spokesman Suhail Shaheen as Afghanistan's permanent representative to the UN.

The note came after Guterres had received a separate letter from Isaczai, dated September 15, containing the list of Afghanistan's delegation for the session.

That letter listed Isaczai as Afghanistan's permanent representative.

The UN still considers Isaczai the head of Afghanistan's mission.

“Only the mission can withdraw,” from addressing the assembly, a UN official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The Afghan mission was not immediately available for comment.

A nine-member credentials committee that included the United States, Russia and China, has to approve the Taliban's request but it did not meet in time.

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