Russia lifts Taliban's designation as 'terrorist' group

President of Russia Vladimir Putin speaks as he meets with the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (not seen) in Moscow, Russia on June 14, 2024. Sefa Karacan / Anadolu
Russia's Supreme Court on Thursday removed
the Taliban's designation as a "terrorist organisation", a symbolic
gesture aimed at building friendly ties with Afghanistan's de facto rulers.
The Islamist group seized power in
Afghanistan in August 2021, when American forces supporting the country's
internationally recognised government pulled out.
Moscow, which called the US withdrawal a
"failure", has taken steps to normalise relations with the Taliban
authorities since then, seeing them as a potential economic partner and ally in
fighting terrorism.
"The previously established ban on the
activities of the Taliban -- included on the unified federal list of
organisations recognised as terrorist -- has been suspended," Supreme
Court Judge Oleg Nefedov said in a ruling, according to the TASS state news
agency.
"The decision enters into legal force
immediately," he added.
Russia's Prosecutor General asked the court
to remove the group's "terrorist" designation last month, following
several trips to Russia by top Taliban officials.
A Taliban delegation attended Russia's
flagship economic forum in Saint Petersburg in 2022 and in 2024, and the
group's top diplomat met Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow last
October.
The decision to suspend the label does not
amount to formal recognition for the Taliban authorities, which are seeking
international legitimacy.
But it helps avoid embarrassment for Russian
officials meeting representatives from the militant group at high-profile
events.
- Shifting attitudes -
Moscow's attitude toward the Taliban has
shifted drastically over the last two decades.
The group was formed in 1994 during the
Afghan Civil War, largely by former Mujahideen fighters who battled the Soviet
Union during the 1980s.
The Soviet-Afghan war, which left thousands
of young Soviet men dead and wounded, resulted in a stinging defeat for Moscow
that hastened the demise of the USSR.
Moscow put the Taliban on its terrorist
blacklist in 2003 over its support for separatists in the North Caucasus.
But the Taliban's return to power in 2021
has forced Russia and other countries in the region to change tack as they
compete for influence.
Russia was the first country to open a
business representative office in Kabul after the Taliban takeover, and has announced
plans to use Afghanistan as a transit hub for gas heading to Southeast Asia.
In July 2024, Russian President Vladimir
Putin called the Taliban "allies in the fight against terrorism".
Both Russia and the Taliban authorities have
been trying to eradicate Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K), an Islamist group
responsible for deadly attacks in both Afghanistan and Russia, including an
attack on a Moscow concert hall in March 2024 that killed 145.
Other countries have also sought
to foster ties with the Taliban authorities, though no state has yet moved
to officially recognise them.
Kazakhstan announced last year that it had
removed the Taliban from its list of "terrorist organisations".
In 2023, China became the first country to appoint a new ambassador to Kabul and has forged growing economic links with its new rulers.
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