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Accepting Taliban nominee to embassy in Delhi would undermine India’s credibility: Experts at Afghan conference
The Hindu
India urged to not normalize engagement with Taliban regime in Kabul, despite reports of accepting Taliban-appointed diplomat.
Amidst a growing number of reports that India will accept a Taliban-appointed diplomat to head the Afghanistan Embassy in Delhi, speakers at a conference of prominent Afghan exiles here urged New Delhi to not “normalise” its engagement with the regime in Kabul. The reports carried by Afghan media, citing Taliban Foreign Ministry officials as well as international news agency Bloomberg, followed weeks after India’s Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri met with the Taliban’s ‘acting’ Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi in Dubai on January 8. This is the highest-level engagement the Indian government has conducted with the Taliban since the latter took power in Kabul in August 2021.
In November 2024, New Delhi accepted a Taliban-approved nominee, Ikramuddin Kamil, as ‘Acting Consul General’ in Mumbai. If India were to allow a Taliban-appointed nominee to head the Afghanistan Embassy in Delhi, it would join other countries, including China, Pakistan, Russia, Iran, the UAE, Qatar and Central Asian states, while at least 16 countries, including Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea, France, and several other European capitals, have rejected the Taliban’s nominees, and still host Ambassadors of the Afghan Republic.
Speaking to The Hindu at the Herat Security Dialogue in Madrid organised by the Afghanistan Institute of Strategic Studies, which is now based in London, former senior officials and diplomats cautioned against any such move.
“This shift [would] mark a stark departure from India’s historical stance and undermine its credibility as a nation that has long condemned terrorism in all forms. The Afghan people expect India to uphold its own stated foreign policy of making no distinction between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ terrorists, demonstrating a principled and consistent approach rather than one driven by short-term geopolitical calculations,” former Afghan Ambassador Ashraf Haidari said. Mr. Haidari is the founder and president of Displaced International, an agency advocating for the rights of those forcibly displaced by conflict.
Mr. Haidari, who was also Afghanistan’s Deputy Chief of Mission in New Delhi and then Ambassador to Sri Lanka in the pre-Taliban era, has been critical of India’s decision to engage with the Taliban while refusing visas to Afghans, including thousands of students who gained admission to universities in India.
“India has effectively abandoned the Afghan people, choosing instead to align with a terrorist network responsible for deadly attacks on Indian personnel and assets in Afghanistan,” Mr. Haidari told The Hindu.
When asked about the possible move, India’s former Ambassador to Afghanistan, Jayant Prasad, who too attended the Herat Security Dialogue, said India had “done well” to engage the Taliban, as it was the “de facto authority” and connection to the Afghan people. However, he stressed that the government “should not provide legitimacy to the Islamic Emirate at a time it has refused political dialogue to create an inclusive government, and is engaged in the persistent and systematic oppression of women and minorities”.