G20 extraordinary meeting on Afghanistan to be held on Oct. 12 — Draghi

G20 extraordinary meeting on Afghanistan to be held on Oct. 12 — Draghi
Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi said an extraordinary meeting of the Group of 20 major economies to discuss Afghanistan will take place on Oct. 12. (AP)
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Updated 30 September 2021
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G20 extraordinary meeting on Afghanistan to be held on Oct. 12 — Draghi

G20 extraordinary meeting on Afghanistan to be held on Oct. 12 — Draghi
  • Italy holds the rotating G20 presidency this year and Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi has recently discussed Afghanistan with other world leaders
  • The international community must also lay down a strategy to prevent Afghanistan becoming a haven for militants, he said

ROME: An extraordinary meeting of the Group of 20 major economies to discuss Afghanistan will take place on Oct. 12, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi said on Wednesday.
Italy holds the rotating G20 presidency this year and Draghi has recently discussed Afghanistan with other world leaders — including Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping — in an effort to organize a special meeting to lay down strategies to confront the crisis.
“We have to see whether there are shared objectives among the G20 nations...we have reached a point where we only need to worry about saving lives,” Draghi told a news conference.
The international community must also lay down a strategy to prevent Afghanistan becoming a haven for militants, he said.
The extraordinary G20 meeting will take place a few weeks before the summit of the leaders scheduled in Rome for Oct. 30-31. Draghi said Qatar, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the United Nations will also participate.
The Afghan crisis is fueling worries within the European Union over the risk of massive flows of migrants and some member states have already opposed plans to accommodate refugees.
After taking control of Afghanistan, the Taliban has reportedly announced it would restore the use of severe punishment on lawbreakers, according to comments by an official, including amputations and executions, and curb women rights.
Rome has said the systematic violation of women rights makes it impossible to recognize the Taliban administration but has urged foreign government to guarantee financial support to the Afghan civilians.
“I believe it is the duty of the richest countries in the world to do something to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe,” Draghi said.