Email Print   Text Size
UN removes 5 Taliban from sanctions blacklist

Posted:

Updated:

AP National Video  more>> 
Colombian is world's shortest man at 27 inches
Guinness World Records certifies 27-inch-tall Colombian as world's shortest man
Attorney: JetBlue attendant in NYC flap resigned
Attorney says JetBlue flight attendant in NYC airport flap resigned, wasn't fired by airline
Video shows calm scene after Denver plane crash
N. Zealand quake smashes buildings, rips new fault
Powerful 7.1 earthquake smashes buildings, rips open new fault, but no deaths reported
Earl's biggest damage in Northeast: business
Earl causes power outages in Canada; biggest Northeast impact might be business on big weekend
Earl takes aim at New England
Hurricane Earl sideswipes NC's Outer Banks, then takes aim at New England; Cape Cod threatened
Earl sideswipes NC, takes aim at New England
Hurricane Earl sideswipes NC's Outer Banks, then takes aim at New England; Cape Cod threatened
Earl sideswipes NC
Hurricane Earl sideswipes NC's Outer Banks, then takes aim at New England; Cape Cod threatened
Broke youth anti-crime groups want federal cash
Struggling youth crime prevention groups see salvation in $1.6B federal bailout of sorts
Earl weakens to Category 1, heads for Northeast
Earl weakens to a Category 1 hurricane on track for Northeast, top sustained winds near 85 mph
By EDITH M. LEDERER
Associated Press Writer

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The U.N. Security Council on Friday removed five Taliban members from its sanctions blacklist, a move sought by the Afghan government to promote reconciliation.

Still, it was just half the number Afghan President Hamid Karzai was seeking.

The council committee monitoring sanctions against the Taliban and al-Qaida said all those taken off the list worked for the Taliban regime which ruled Afghanistan for five years before it was driven out in the U.S.-led invasion at the end of 2001.

The committee identified those delisted as former U.N. ambassador Abdul Hakim Mujahid Muhammad Awrang; former deputy minister of mines and industries Abdul Salam Zaeef, who wrote "My Life with the Taliban;" Abdul Satar Paktin, who worked in the Foreign Ministry and was deputy minister of health, and two members described as "deceased," former deputy interior minister Abdul Samad Khaksar and the former governor of Bamiyan province, Muhammad Islam Mohammadi.

The sanctions committee said 135 Taliban members remain on the list and are still subject to an asset freeze and travel ban.

Earlier this month, Staffan De Mistura, the top U.N. envoy in Afghanistan, said Afghan officials submitted 10 names for delisting which were forwarded to the sanctions committee.

Karzai has been making peace overtures to Taliban members, who have long demanded removal from the sanctions list to help promote reconciliation and a political solution to the nearly nine-year Afghan war.

Last month, Afghan delegates to a national conference, or peace jirga, called on the government and its international partners to remove some Taliban members from the sanctions list.

Zaeef, the author who was also the Taliban's former ambassador to Pakistan, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Kabul Friday that while he's personally happy to be off the sanctions list, more needs to be done to achieve stability in Afghanistan because people are dying every day and there is no peace.

"This is just a small step - a small step - toward peace," he said. "There are lots of obstacles. There needs to be even more names delisted."

Zaeef is believed to be a conduit between the Afghan government and Mullah Omar's Taliban.

Mujahid, the U.N. envoy under the Taliban, told the AP that he was happy to be delisted, calling it a confidence-building measure between the international community, the Afghan government and the armed opposition.

"We were deprived of our economic, political and human rights according to the sanctions. In spite of this, we have tried our best to make cooperation between the Taliban and the people and the government," said Mujahid, who also lives in Kabul.

"This is the time (for) the government of Afghanistan and the armed opposition to come together to stop all atrocities and go toward real reconciliation and real reintegration," Mujahid said. "We are working for a government of national unity"- one that represents all ethnic groups, tribes and political factions.

Last Friday, the Security Council "took note" of Karzai's program to reintegrate fighters who renounce violence, and acknowledged "the intention of the Afghan government to engage with the council and the international community in an evidence-based and transparent process of delisting."

The sanctions committee has just completed a review of all names on the list.

Austria's U.N. Ambassador Thomas Mayr-Harting, the committee's chairman, has said decisions on delisting are based on four principles: has the person convincingly renounced violence, laid down arms, broken all links with al-Qaida, and fully accepted the Afghan Constitution.

___

Associated Press Writers Deb Riechmann and Amir Shah contributed to this report from Kabul, Afghanistan.

(This version CORRECTS Updates with sanctions committee official announcement, new quotes and background; corrects that 135 names remain on list, not 132. For global distribution.)

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Health
Featured: Many Americans don't know fat

Entertainment
Featured: Olson, McElhenney welcome baby

Business News
Get the latest updates on everything from local businesses to smart investments.

Going Green
Get the latest tips for making your life greener from abc40 and Fox 6.

Community
Check out a list of local events or submit your own to be featured on our Community Page!

Education
Check out all the latest news from region's schools and universities!

Making a Difference
Every week, abc40 highlights a group or organization that is Making a Difference in the community. Check out some of these great honorees!

Crime Files
Crime Files with Kathy Reynolds - Springfield Police's Most Wanted Fugitives and Cold Cases.
All content © Copyright 2000 - 2010 WorldNow and WGGB. All Rights Reserved.
For more information on this site, please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

Advertiser Log-in