TEHRAN— Qatar's foreign minister met his Iranian
counterpart in Tehran on Thursday to discuss developments in Afghanistan, the
Qatari diplomat and Iranian media said.
اضافة اعلان
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani held "talks on
regional and international issues" with Iran's Hossein Amir-Abdollahian,
reported Iran's ISNA news agency.
Sheikh Mohammed, who this week met US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken in Doha, tweeted that he and Iran's foreign minister met
"to discuss the developments in Afghanistan".
"The
State of Qatar believes in the effectiveness of
having a unified vision to ensure a comprehensive solution for
Afghanistan," he added.
The two men also discussed improving trade relations,
including by speeding up visa issuance for business travelers, Iran's official
IRNA news agency reported.
Qatar is close to the US and hosts Washington's largest
military base in the region, but it also enjoys strong ties with Tehran, with
which it shares the world's largest gas field.
Iran, worried about the Taliban's return to power, on Monday
"strongly" condemned its assault on Afghanistan's Panjshir Valley,
which had been the last stronghold of resistance.
The region's dominant Shiite Muslim power, Iran had until
now refrained from criticizing the Taliban since the Sunni group seized Kabul
on August 15.
Qatar has long acted as a mediator on Afghanistan, hosting
the Taliban's talks with the United States under former president Donald Trump,
and then with the now deposed Afghan government of president Ashraf Ghani.
Iran, which shares a 900km border with Afghanistan, did not
recognize the Taliban during their 1996 to 2001 stint in power.
Already hosting nearly 3.5 million Afghans, and fearing a
new refugee influx, Tehran has however sought to reach a rapprochement with the
Taliban since their lightning seizure of Kabul amid the US withdrawal last
month.
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