"The unimpeded and increasingly brutal terrorist attacks, the territorial gains by terrorist groups with support from outside Afghanistan and the emerging grave humanitarian crises are all portents of dreadful times," India's Permanent Representative to the UN Syed Akbaruddin said yesterday during a Security Council session on the situation in Afghanistan.
"It is our first and foremost duty to ensure that the resurgent forces of terrorism and extremism do not find sanctuaries and safe havens in any name, form or manifestation," he said, adding that experience has shown when "foreign assistance" is available to insurgents, situations tend to fester and take a greater toll.
"The Taliban, Haqqani Network, Al-Qaeda, Daesh, Lashkar-e-Toiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, and others of their ilk are all terror organisations, many of them proscribed by the UN. They should be treated like terrorist organisations and their activities universally opposed," he said.
In a criticism of the world body, Akbaruddin said it is obvious that the political process the UN had started and the sanction regimes it had split have not quite worked.
"The fact that the Council has not acted on the Taliban leaders as it had vowed in resolution 1988 is now well documented," he said.
"It is now 7 months and we are still counting as we await the decision of the Council's same subsidiary on freezing the accounts of that slain terrorist," he said.
Akbaruddin cautioned that the international community cannot stand and watch from the sidelines as gains achieved by them and the Afghan people towards the war-torn country's development in the last decades are reversed.
India called for decisive action to combat terror groups, saying nations have had to pay a costly price for their inactions in the past.
The ambassador voiced concern that in the last few
months, terrorism in Afghanistan has grown enormously in its intensity, brutality and scope.
UN envoy for Afghanistan Tadamichi Yamamoto expressed concern over the deteriorating security situation in the war-torn nation, urging the Taliban to enter peace talks without preconditions and warning against attacks by foreign fighters, including ISIS.
The deteriorating security also led to the highest-ever level of internal displacement in 2016. More than 650,000 Afghans were displaced. Returns from Pakistan exceeded 620,000 people. Displacements and returns for 2017 are likely to remain at these levels.
Developing a nation while fighting an insurgency is an uphill struggle, he emphasised, noting that due in part to the worsening security situation over the past two years, service delivery has become increasingly difficult.
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