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Afghan leader to visit Russia for aid talks
By Vladimir Radyuhin
MOSCOW, JUNE 30. The Acting Foreign Minister of the Afghan
opposition government, Dr. Abdulla, will visit Russia on July 3
and July 4 to discuss new aid to the Northern Alliance forces as
Moscow is trying to expand the anti-Taliban coalition and build
up international pressure to rein in the Taliban.
The visit comes on the heels of a series of consultations on
Afghanistan that Russia has conducted with India, the United
States, China and Central Asian States. ``It is necessary to
force the Taliban through concerted efforts to renounce attempts
to resolve the Afghan problem by force, to strictly respect
fundamental human rights, including the rights of women, national
and religious minorities, to stop the destruction of cultural and
historical monuments which are part of the mankind's heritage,''
the spokesman of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Mr. Alexander
Yakovenko, said, commenting on Dr. Abdulla's visit.
Russia has been instrumental in forging a broader anti-Taliban
coalition in Afghanistan, saying the Taliban posed a direct
threat to Russian security. ``A number of field commanders who
recently returned to Afghanistan have joined the fighting on the
side of the opposition front,'' the First Deputy Foreign
Minister, Mr. Vyacheslav Trubnikov, Russia's chief international
co-ordinator for Afghanistan, said in an interview last week,
citing increased opposition activity in Bamiam, Herat, Nangarhar,
Balh and other Afghan provinces.
``The threats emanating from the Taliban are destabilising the
situation in the Central Asian region, which is threatening
Russia's immediate interests,'' Mr. Trubnikov said.
Simultaneously, Moscow has been urging more vigorous
international action to force the Taliban to the negotiating
table to discuss a coalition government.
Russia favours ``broad-based international interaction in the
framework of the U.N., the CIS Collective Security Treaty, the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation and other multilateral and
bilateral formats'' to neutralise the threats emanating from
Afghanistan, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mr. Yakovenko, said.
Over the past month Russia, India and the United States in
bilateral consultations have worked out joint proposals for
international monitoring to force Pakistan to comply with the
U.N. Security Council embargo on arms supplies to the Taliban.
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