The unknown Afghan pastor promised the world good relations, but he tried not to place heavy responsibilities on the education of young women, despite global demands to allow all young Afghans to return to school.
About two months after the implosion of the previous Western government and the Kabul Rally, the new Taliban organization pushed for relationships with several countries to help fight a cataclysmic currency emergency.
"The global local area must start helping us," Acting Foreign Minister Mullah Amir Khan Muttaqi said on Monday on an occasion coordinated by the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies at the Institute of Graduate Studies of Doha.
"With that, we will actually want to stop the weakness and, at the same time, we will really want to definitely connect with the world.
However, the Taliban have so far not succumbed to allowing young women to return to high school, one of the region's critical demands around the world after last month's choice that schools beyond the sixth year only resume for young men.
Muttaqi said the government of the Islamic Emirate of the Taliban is moving cautiously, but has been in power for half a month and cannot be expected to make the changes that the local area world had not been able to perform in 20 years.
"They had a lot of financial resources, and they had strong sponsorship and global support, but are you asking that we make all the changes in two months? he said.
The new organization has been the subject of a substantiated analysis of its approach to the school of young women, thinking of a predetermined number of additions determined unequivocally by the twenty years of inclusion of the West in Afghanistan.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Gutierrez said the Taliban had violated guarantees for the freedom of women and young women, and that it was virtually impossible that the economy could be repaired if women were banned from job.
Multi rehashed calls on the United States to raise a square on more than $9 billion in Afghan national banks it holds outside the country, but said the state authority has its own revenues from its tariff, customs and agribusiness if assets remained frozen.
He said the Taliban powers had full control of the nation and had the ability to control the danger from the Islamic State in Khoisan province, ISP contenders who claimed a progression of assaults destructive in recent times, reminiscent of the last week's siege in a Shiite mosque in the northern city of kunduz
“The issue of Dash has been very closely linked by the Islamic Emirate so far,” he said, using a local term for the rigged rally, while noting that the global tension within the authority public was helping ISP confidence.
"Rather than pressure, the world should be helping us.
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