Indian officials visit Kabul for first Taliban meet since US left

Indian officials visit Kabul for first Taliban meet since US left
Afghan policemen stand guard next to Indian and Afghan national flags, at a check point in Kabul, Afghanistan, on May 12, 2011. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 02 June 2022
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Indian officials visit Kabul for first Taliban meet since US left

Indian officials visit Kabul for first Taliban meet since US left
  • Indian officials will oversee delivery of humanitarian assistance, visit areas with Indian-backed programmes or projects
  • India pulled its officials out of Afghanistan last August, closed its embassy although New Delhi is keen to retain ties

NEW DELHI: India has sent a team of foreign ministry officials to Afghanistan's capital of Kabul for talks with senior members of the ruling Taliban, the ministry said on Thursday, the first such meeting since the chaotic US withdrawal last year.

Poverty and hunger have rocketed in the strife-torn nation since the Islamist militants took power last year after the United States withdrew.

"The Indian team will meet the senior members of the Taliban, and hold discussions on India’s humanitarian assistance to the people of Afghanistan," the ministry said in a statement. 

The officials would oversee delivery of humanitarian assistance and visit areas targeted by Indian-backed programmes or projects, it added.

India has donated about 20,000 tonnes of wheat, 13 tonnes of medicines, 500,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine and winter clothing, with more medicine and foodgrain on the way, it said.

The South Asian nation pulled its officials out of Afghanistan last August and closed its embassy, although New Delhi is keen to retain ties with the country where its arch-enemy, Pakistan, wields considerable influence.