Australia to step up sanctions against Afghan Taliban

Australia to step up sanctions against Afghan Taliban
UN has warned of ‘gender apartheid’ in Afghanistan, while persecution of minorities is commonplace. (FILE/AFP)
Short Url
Updated 8 sec ago

Australia to step up sanctions against Afghan Taliban

Australia to step up sanctions against Afghan Taliban
  • Human Rights Watch welcomes move that could see more targeted moves against regime figures
  • UN has warned of ‘gender apartheid’ in Afghanistan, while persecution of minorities is commonplace

LONDON: Australia’s new sanctions proposals against the Afghan Taliban are an “important step toward accountability” for the regime in Kabul, Human Rights Watch has said.

Amendments proposed to Canberra’s sanctions regime will allow Australia to target Taliban officials more directly, including through travel bans.

HRW said the changes to the Autonomous Sanctions Regulations would affect those involved in the oppression of females and minorities, as well as those “undermining good governance and the rule of law” in the country.

“It’s crucial for the Australian government to take action against Taliban leaders responsible for the assault on women and girls’ rights and other egregious abuses in Afghanistan,” said Daniela Gavshon, HRW’s Australia director.

“The amended sanctions regulations will allow Australia to join with other countries already taking steps to oppose the Taliban’s widespread and systematic oppression.”

The Taliban have been internationally condemned since retaking power in Afghanistan in August 2021 for their oppression of females, minorities and political opponents. 

The UN has warned that the Taliban are practising “gender apartheid” with severe limits placed on females’ right to work, education or to operate freely. Gender persecution is recognized as a crime against humanity, HRW said.

“The Australian government should use targeted sanctions as an important foreign policy tool against the Taliban to press for accountability for serious abuses,” Gavshon said. 

“Imposing sanctions on abusive leaders is one of several measures that can raise the cost of committing human rights violations in Afghanistan and elsewhere.”

Afghanistan has also become unsafe for a multitude of other people since the Taliban’s resurgence, with censorship normalized and the torture of journalists and activists commonplace, HRW added. 


Germany agrees to keep military service voluntary

Updated 7 sec ago

Germany agrees to keep military service voluntary

Germany agrees to keep military service voluntary
BERLIN: Germany’s coalition government has agreed a new voluntary military service model, politicians said Thursday, after weeks of wrangling over whether there should be a compulsory element.
Under the plan, all 18-year-old men will from next year have to fill in a questionnaire on whether they would want to serve and undergo an armed forces physical test.
No one will be compelled to join the Bundeswehr, however, said Defense Minister Boris Pistorius. He has advocated instead a campaign to make military service more attractive to draw more male and female recruits.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz has made bolstering Germany’s ill-equipped military a major priority, citing a hostile Russia and doubts about future US security commitment to Europe.
He has moved to sharply increase spending on the military and vowed to turn the Bundeswehr into “the strongest conventional army in Europe.”
The cabinet approved a revamped military service model in August, spearheaded by Pistorius of the center-left SPD.
But members of Merz’s conservative CDU/CSU then called for a compulsory element in the form of a “draft lottery,” to be applied if there were not enough volunteers.
The lottery idea has been scrapped for now, part of a deal reached late Wednesday, said Jens Spahn, leader of the CDU/CSU parliamentary faction.
“If voluntary service is ultimately not enough, then compulsory service will also be necessary,” Spahn said, adding however that that would require further legislation.
Matthias Miersch, the SPD’s parliamentary group leader, said he was certain the Bundeswehr could find enough volunteers, calling the new model “an offer” to young men and women, “not an obligation.”
Pistorius said compulsory service would be a “last resort” and the focus would be on “designing an attractive service.”
“I am very confident that all this will succeed,” he added.
“Other European countries, especially in the north, show that the principle of voluntary service combined with attractiveness works, and I expect the same here.”