IEA reject claims by UNSC that foreign groups are active in Afghanistan 

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) on Monday rejected claims by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) that there are foreign
terrorist groups sheltering in Afghanistan.  In a statement issued by the foreign ministry, the IEA said there were no foreign groups in
the country and that for the past nine months, the new government has worked to build an environment of trust between Afghanistan and the
international community.  The ministry said it &views UNSC Monitoring Team Report (13) asserting the existence and operation of foreign
groups in Afghanistan as unfounded and rejects it in the strongest terms.& The fact remains that since the return to power of the Islamic
Emirate, the world and the region have been prevented from facing any harm from Afghanistan,& the foreign ministry statement said.  The
IEA said it will live up to its commitments and ensure that no country is threatened by Afghanistan. The foreign ministry also called on
the UNSC to obtain facts and to allow the IEA&s representatives to take up their rightful posts at the United Nations.  We also urge
abstinence from seeking unsubstantiated information from anonymous sources, and to grant the current Afghan government its legitimate right
to directly present factual information to the UNSC and other countries through its permanent representatives at the UN,& read the
statement. The United Nations Security Council report, released on Friday, stated there is a persistent threat to Pakistan&s security from
the Afghanistan-based Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and warned that prospects of success of the ongoing peace process with the terror
group were bleak, The annual report of the 1988 IEA sanctions committee monitoring team noted TTP&s linkages with the IEA and explained how
they benefitted from the fall of the Ashraf Ghani regime last year and touched upon the IEA&s relations with other terrorist groups
operating from Afghanistan. The TTP, the report noted, had up to 4,000 fighters based in east and south-east areas along the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border and made up the largest group of foreign fighters based there. This was the team&s first report for the
committee since the IEA takeover of Kabul in August last year. The UNSC stated in its report: &The Taliban (IEA) victory in Afghanistan has
inspired terrorists around the world, although the relocation of foreign terrorist fighters to Afghanistan has not materialized in
significant numbers.  The Taliban have continued to insist publicly that there are no foreign terrorist fighters in Afghanistan, even
though Member States are clear that many fought alongside the Taliban in 2021.  Central Asian embassies based in Afghanistan reported with
concern the appearance of several leaders of foreign terrorist groups apparently moving freely around Kabul from August onwards,& the report
stated.  However, the UNSC stated that ''there are reports that the Taliban (IEA) have forced some foreign terrorist fighters to disarm or
have relocated others away from the capital so that they remain inconspicuous.& TTP constitutes the largest component of foreign terrorist
fighters in Afghanistan, with their number estimated to be several thousand
Other groups include the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Jaish-i-Mohammed (JiM), Jamaat
Ansarullah and Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (LeT), with each numbering in the few hundreds,& read the report.  TTP has arguably benefitted the most
of all the foreign extremist groups in Afghanistan from the Taliban (IEA) takeover.  It has conducted numerous attacks and operations in
Pakistan
TTP also continues to exist as a stand-alone force, rather than feeling pressure to merge its fighters into Afghan Taliban units, as is the
prospect for most foreign terrorist fighters,& read the report.  The UNSC meanwhile said in its report that following the IEA takeover,
some members of ETIM were relocated IEA from Badakhshan to provinces further from the Chinese border as part of the Taliban&s efforts both
to protect and restrain the group.  Assessments of the group&s size range from a low of several dozen fighters, according to one Member
State, to as many as 1,000 members, according to other Member States,& UNSC reported.  The report noted that several Member States
reported some ETIM members have fraudulently obtained local identity documents by fabricating Afghan identities
&The group is seeking to further entrench its presence in the country by both organizing marriages to local women and facilitating the
relocation of Uighur women to Afghanistan.The post IEA reject claims by UNSC that foreign groups are active in Afghanistan  first appeared
on Ariana News.