AT Monitoring Desk
KABUL: Academy Award-winning actress and refugee activist
Angelina Jolie pushed for the inclusion of women in peace talks to end the
conflict in Afghanistan during an address to ministers and diplomats at the
United Nations on Friday.
Peace talks between US and Taliban officials began late last year. However,
some women fear the freedoms eked out since US-backed Afghan forces overthrew
the Taliban in 2001 could slide backwards, and complain their voices are being
sidelined.
“In Afghanistan thousands of women have recently come together in public
risking their lives to ask that their rights and the rights of their children
be guaranteed in peace negotiations that so far they have been allow no part
of,” Jolie told a ministerial meeting on UN peacekeeping.
“The international community’s silent response is alarming to say the least,”
said Jolie, a special envoy for the UN refugee agency UNHCR, which she began
working with 18 years ago. “There can be no peace or stability in Afghanistan
or anywhere else in the world that involves trading away the rights of women.”
While the Taliban has said in official statements they might consider more
liberal policies toward women, their chief negotiator has said the
constitution, which protects women’s rights, is an obstacle to peace, said the
U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction on Thursday.
Jolie also touted the importance of a United States that is “part of an
international community,” after a retreat by U.S. President Donald Trump from
U.N. agencies and global agreements that has some countries concerned about his
commitment to multilateralism.
“I’m a patriot, I love my country and I want to see it thrive. I also believe
in an America that is part of an international community. Countries working
together on equal footing is how we reduce the risk of conflict,” she said.
“A country that believes that all men and women are born free and equal cannot
be true to itself if it doesn’t defend those principles for all people,
wherever they live,” she said.