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Important Editorial Summary for UPSC Exam

4Oct
2023

The shutdown of the Afghan embassy (GS Paper 2, International Relation)

The shutdown of the Afghan embassy (GS Paper 2, International Relation)

Why in news?

  • Recently, a statement carrying the seal of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan announced the closure of the Embassy of Afghanistan in Delhi.
  • The Embassy of Afghanistan blamed multiple factors including lack of cooperation from the Government of India and a lack of resources to operate any further.
  • Furthermore, the embassy has urged the Indian government to fly the flag of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan over embassy premises. It has also asked India to hand over the mission to a “legitimate government” of Afghanistan sometime in the future.

 

Is this a turning point for Afghanistan-India relations?

  • The embassy represented the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan that was deposed through a military campaign by the Taliban on August 15, 2021.
  • The Taliban fighters who quickly took over all the major cities and infrastructure of the country, as the U.S. forces carried out a messy withdrawal, were not recognised by India as de facto rulers.
  • With the displacement of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, the embassy of Afghanistan in New Delhi had begun to work as a “stateless mission” as it did not represent the current rulers of Kabul, that is the Taliban, with whom India has no diplomatic relationship.
  • The mission had stopped representing an active state since August 2021 and was working as a coordinating agency.

 

Will the move affect travel and trade between Afghanistan and India?

  • Afghanistan has traditionally maintained an embassy in Delhi and two consulates in Hyderabad and Mumbai.
  • The consulates in Hyderabad and Mumbai have not shut down and Zakia Wardak, the Consul General of Afghanistan (Islamic Republic) has come out with a statement defying the embassy’s announcement to close down the mission, stating that the consulate will continue to function as part of a “solemn commitment” towards thousands of Afghan students, refugees and traders.
  • The announcement of the embassy of Afghanistan is expected to trigger confusion among Afghans in India but the consulates are expected to help them.

 

Does this mean that India and Afghanistan have no relations?

  • Despite the closure of the embassy in Delhi, India and Afghanistan are continuing engagement with each other in a curious way.
  • India has been maintaining a “technical team” in Kabul where the staff provides visas to Afghan traders and travellers to India.

 

Will India and the Taliban ever establish formal ties?

  • India has not recognised Taliban formally but Indian diplomats have been engaged with the Taliban since the immediate aftermath of the fall of Kabul in August 2021.
  • Indian diplomats have met the Taliban’s representatives in multiple locations under multilateral initiatives like the recent Moscow format dialogue.

 

International recognition:

  • That apart, Taliban is quickly gaining international recognition from rival powers like China which sent a new ambassador to Kabul in September.
  • With Iran, Pakistan, the UAE, Russia, Qatar and China warming ties with the Taliban, there is obvious pressure on India to reconsider its position on the Taliban.
  • The Taliban has been urging India to support it with its economic revitalisation through projects like electricity generation and road building works.
  • India, however, has not yet indicated that it will review its position on the Taliban.
  • The embassy of Afghanistan in Delhi is one of the oldest diplomatic addresses in the capital and India has never allowed the Taliban to operate from that address, even when it governed Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001.