Amnesty International Afghanistan: Human rights must be guaranteed during Taleban talks

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Human rights, including women’s rights, must not be traded away or compromised during any reconciliation talks with the Taleban in Afghanistan, Amnesty International said on the eve of a London conference set to discuss deteriorating security conditions in the country.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, other leaders and foreign ministers are to discuss security arrangements in Afghanistan for the next two years, including reconciliation programmes to reintegrate so-called moderate elements of Taleban.

«Any discussions with the Taleban must include clear commitments that they will respect and promote the rights of the Afghan people,» said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International´s Asia-Pacific director.

“The Taleban established a terrible record of violating human rights during their rule and they have done nothing since then to indicate they will act differently if they return to power.”

«The policymakers gathered in London this week have to show that they will not sacrifice the well-being of the Afghan people at the altar of  political and military expediency.»
Similar deals with the Taleban in neighbouring Pakistan led to increased human rights violations in areas under Taleban control and a significant  escalation in conflict and insecurity.
The Afghan government and insurgent groups must both adhere to Afghanistan’s obligations under international human rights law and  domestic law, Amnesty International said.

The Taleban and other insurgent groups in Afghanistan have shown little  regard for human rights and the laws of war, deliberately targeting  civilians, launching indiscriminate suicide attacks in which civilians  are killed and engaging in the wholesale destruction of girls’ education.
According to UN figures, the Taleban were responsible for two thirds of  the more than 2400 civilian casualties in Afghanistan last year, the  bloodiest year yet since the fall of the Taleban.

In areas under their control, the Taleban have severely curtailed the  rights of girls and women, including the denial of education,  employment, freedom of movement and political participation and  representation.

Afghan civil society groups, in particular women´s groups, have voiced  serious alarms about the prospect of ceding any type of political  control to the Taleban.

“Diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict are a positive step  forward,” said Sam Zarifi, “but the rights of the Afghan people must  never be negotiated away.

 “It is our experience that peace without justice or human rights is not  real peace and could ultimately lead to further conflict.”