Taliban to sign pact with UAE on running Afghan airports

Taliban to sign pact with UAE on running Afghan airports
People arriving at Hamid Karzai International Airport of Kabul in Afghanistan on May 8, 2018. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 24 May 2022
Follow

Taliban to sign pact with UAE on running Afghan airports

Taliban to sign pact with UAE on running Afghan airports
  • Acting deputy PM Mullah Baradar says his administration renewing an airport ground handling agreement with UAE
  • Not immediately clear whether the agreement went beyond existing arrangements or if it included airport security

KABUL: The Taliban will sign an agreement with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on operating airports in Afghanistan, the group’s acting deputy prime minister said on Tuesday, after months of talks with the UAE, Turkey, and Qatar.

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar made the announcement in a Tweet and later told reporters in Kabul that his administration was renewing an airport ground handling agreement with the UAE.

It was not immediately clear whether the agreement went beyond existing arrangements or if it included airport security, a sensitive issue for the Taliban who fought for decades against US-led NATO troops and say they do not want the return of international forces.

The UAE’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A source briefed on the negotiations told Reuters that a sticking point in the negotiations with Qatar has been Doha’s condition that Qatari security personnel be present at the airport.

Qatar and Turkey had already sent temporary technical teams to help airport operations and security after the Taliban took over in August last year as foreign forces withdrew.

The airport talks have demonstrated how countries are seeking to assert their influence in Afghanistan even as the hard-line Islamist group largely remains an international pariah and its government not formally recognized by any country.