Afghan embassies around the world that have refused to recognize the new Taliban regime are struggling to stay afloat and facing increasing pressure from Kabul to accept loyalist replacements.
None of the country’s 60 or so ambassadors, consuls or heads of diplomatic missions who were appointed by Western-backed former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani have agreed to serve the hardline Islamist group since it seized power in August last year.
The Taliban government has yet to be formally recognized by any nation, and the international community is grappling with how to deal with the country’s new rulers while also helping Afghans face an economic and humanitarian crisis.
“We are in a very unfortunate ... situation, but we still have to continue to operate in these difficult circumstances,” Afghan Ambassador to Norway Youssof Ghafoorzai said.
“The embassies still have a very important role to play in terms of trying to increase whatever humanitarian support is possible, but also [to help] discussions on the political track ... to stabilize the situation,” he said.
Aid and cash reserves, frozen by the US and the international community after the Taliban seized control, are trickling back into the country, which has long depended almost entirely on donors.
However, Ghafoorzai and his colleagues have had no contact with the new regime, and staff have not been paid for months.
The Afghan embassy and its consulates in the US are being shut in the coming week.
“The Afghan embassy and consulates are under severe financial pressure. Their bank accounts are not available to them,” a US Department of State official told reporters.
The embassy and Washington have made arrangements for an “orderly shutdown of operations in a way that would protect and preserve all diplomatic mission property in the United States until operations are able to resume,” the official said.
Around the world, Afghan ambassadors have been forced to dramatically scale down their activities, reduce energy bills and food costs, and even move into smaller premises.
They have also increased consular fees to generate revenue.
“The embassy is not receiving any funding or financial assistance from Kabul,” Afghan Ambassador to New Delhi Farid Mamundzay told reporters. “In the absence of the required financial support and depletion of resources, we have not been able to pay the staff salaries for months and had to downsize the strength and reduce the expenditure of the mission to the lowest.”
It is not clear how long visas, certificates and other documents issued by the holdout embassies will be recognized — either by the Taliban or the international community.
New passports issued in Kabul still refer to the country as the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, instead of the Taliban’s preferred “Emirate,” but officials have told foreign journalists arriving with visas issued independently by the Dubai embassy that they may not be honored in future.
In a handful of countries near Afghanistan, some ambassadors have left their posts or been pushed out by the Taliban, who have inserted their own representatives — but even the replacements face hardship.
In Pakistan, salaries have not been paid since September last year. Employees live on income from visa and passport renewal fees and marriage certificates, said a source at the consulate in Peshawar, near the Afghan border.
The new consul-general appointed by the Taliban receives just 50,000 rupees (US$280) a month compared with the nearly US$5,000 his predecessor made, the source added.
The Taliban made Pakistan, long accused of aiding their cause, the first country to which they sent a new representative.
In Beijing, the ambassador resigned when a senior diplomat loyal to the Taliban was appointed to the embassy, which he is now unofficially leading.
The Taliban have also managed to impose their men in Uzbekistan and Iran.
Meanwhile, Russia said it was ready to accept “two or three” new diplomats, but that they would not take the place of the current ambassador.
The Taliban did not respond to requests for comment, but they have previously claimed to largely have control over Afghan embassies.
However, they have failed to have one of their top spokesmen, Suhail Shaheen, accredited as ambassador to the UN, with the UN General Assembly indefinitely postponing a vote on the matter.
In Rome, Italian police had to intervene after a scuffle between the Afghan ambassador and a recently dismissed pro-Taliban diplomat who claimed he had been given the top job.
“There have been threats, intimidation and violence in some of our missions by disgruntled ex-employees that are ideologically pro-Taliban,” Ambassador to Rome Khaled Zekriya said. “The Taliban administration tried to persuade our embassy to work on their behalf, but I said no.”
“My answer will stay the same until an inclusive representative government will be established in Afghanistan, where the Taliban will be a part, not the only part, of this government,” he said.
The Taliban have also sent delegations from Kabul to Oslo and Geneva, Switzerland, bypassing local embassies, for talks with Western powers.
Afghan diplomatic missions — in particular those in the West — united to openly criticize the Taliban for their failure to respect human rights ahead of the Oslo visit in January.
“It’s a difficult situation,” Ghafoorzai said. “But we also know that we continue to represent a people that have suffered enormous difficulties throughout their history.”
In months, Lo Yuet-ping would bid farewell to a centuries-old village he has called home in Hong Kong for more than seven decades. The Cha Kwo Ling village in east Kowloon is filled with small houses built from metal sheets and stones, as well as old granite buildings, contrasting sharply with the high-rise structures that dominate much of the Asian financial hub. Lo, 72, has spent his entire life here and is among an estimated 860 households required to move under a government redevelopment plan. He said he would miss the rich history, unique culture and warm interpersonal kindness that defined life in
AERIAL INCURSIONS: The incidents are a reminder that Russia’s aggressive actions go beyond Ukraine’s borders, Ukrainian Minister of Foreign Affairs Andrii Sybiha said Two NATO members on Sunday said that Russian drones violated their airspace, as one reportedly flew into Romania during nighttime attacks on neighboring Ukraine, while another crashed in eastern Latvia the previous day. A drone entered Romanian territory early on Sunday as Moscow struck “civilian targets and port infrastructure” across the Danube in Ukraine, the Romanian Ministry of National Defense said. It added that Bucharest had deployed F-16 warplanes to monitor its airspace and issued text alerts to residents of two eastern regions. It also said investigations were underway of a potential “impact zone” in an uninhabited area along the Romanian-Ukrainian border. There
The governor of Ohio is to send law enforcement and millions of dollars in healthcare resources to the city of Springfield as it faces a surge in temporary Haitian migrants. Ohio Governor Mike DeWine on Tuesday said that he does not oppose the Temporary Protected Status program under which about 15,000 Haitians have arrived in the city of about 59,000 people since 2020, but said the federal government must do more to help affected communities. On Monday, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost directed his office to research legal avenues — including filing a lawsuit — to stop the federal government from sending
Three sisters from Ohio who inherited a dime kept in a bank vault for more than 40 years knew it had some value, but they had no idea just how much until just a few years ago. The extraordinarily rare coin, struck by the US Mint in San Francisco in 1975, could bring more than US$500,000, said Ian Russell, president of GreatCollections, which specializes in currency and is handling an online auction that ends next month. What makes the dime depicting former US president Franklin D. Roosevelt so valuable is a missing “S” mint mark for San Francisco, one of just two