• 2025.12.10 (Wed)
  • All articles
  • LOGIN
  • JOIN
Global Economic Times
APEC2025KOREA가이드북
  • Synthesis
  • World
  • Business
  • Industry
  • ICT
  • Distribution Economy
  • Well+Being
  • Travel
  • Eco-News
  • Education
  • Korean Wave News
  • Opinion
  • Arts&Culture
  • Sports
  • People & Life
  • Column
    • Cho Kijo Column
    • Lee Yeon-sil Column
    • Ko Yong-chul Column
    • Cherry Garden Story
  • Photo News
  • New Book Guide
MENU
 
Home > World

Turkey Refuses to Recognize Afghan Diplomats Appointed by Previous Government

Graciela Maria Reporter / Updated : 2025-02-08 03:01:41
  • -
  • +
  • Print

Ankara, Turkey – The Turkish government has refused to recognize the credentials of diplomats appointed by the previous, Western-backed Afghan government, three years after the Taliban's return to power, the departing diplomatic team said on Tuesday. This move paves the way for the Taliban regime to appoint its own diplomats to Turkey.   

The outgoing team said in a post on the X platform that it handed over the Afghan embassy in Ankara to the Turkish Foreign Ministry on Monday. They strongly indicated that the Turkish government's decision to terminate the credentials of the embassy and its diplomats was a result of intense pressure from the Taliban on the diplomats and Turkish officials.   

Turkish authorities have not yet made any official comment on the matter.

Since the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan in August 2021, seizing the capital Kabul and much of the country for the first time in 20 years, the group has been striving to bring foreign embassies and consulates under its control.   

The takeover of the Turkish diplomatic mission marks the Taliban's acquisition and control of over forty foreign missions.

The departing Afghan diplomats claimed that the Turkish government's decision was influenced by its desire to maintain its own embassy in the Afghan capital, Kabul, as well as consulates in Mazar-e-Sharif and Herat.

In July of last year, ahead of the third anniversary of the Taliban's return to power, the group announced that it would no longer recognize the Afghan diplomatic corps dispatched and formed by the previous Western-backed government.   

However, most countries have not yet recognized the Taliban as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan.   

Tensions between the Taliban and the West have heightened since the group's return to power, particularly due to the Taliban regime's imposition of severe restrictions on the activities of women and girls. Despite this, the new Afghan government has established diplomatic relations with key regional players such as China, Russia, and wealthy Gulf states.

[Copyright (c) Global Economic Times. All Rights Reserved.]

Graciela Maria Reporter
Graciela Maria Reporter

Popular articles

  • Japan Pioneers External Airbags for Cyclist Safety, Revolutionizing Auto Industry Protection

  • EU Accelerates 'Battery Independence' with Multi-Trillion Won Public Fund Injection

  • Tragedy's Timepiece: Titanic Passenger's Watch Fetches Record-Breaking $2.5 Million at Auction

I like it
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Kakaotalk
  • LINE
  • BAND
  • NAVER
  • https://globaleconomictimes.kr/article/1065549602641301 Copy URL copied.
Comments >

Comments 0

Weekly Hot Issue

  • The Tragedy on the High Seas: Royal Caribbean Sued Over Passenger Death After 33 Drinks and Fatal Restraint
  • Australia's Digital Iron Curtain: The Global Aftershocks of a World-First Social Media Ban
  • A Golden Noel: The Vance Family's First Christmas at the Naval Observatory
  • A New Era of Transparency: Federal Judges Order Release of Voluminous Epstein Case Files
  • Monopoly or Media Evolution? Netflix-Warner Bros. Deal Triggers Bipartisan Antitrust Fury
  • Jay-Z's Marcy Venture Partners Bets $500M on the Global Growth of K-Culture

Most Viewed

1
Korean War Ally, Reborn as an 'Economic Alliance' Across 70 Years: Chuncheon's 'Path of Reciprocity,' a Strategic
2
A Garden Where the City's Rhythm Stops: Dongdaemun's 'Cherry Garden', Cooking Consideration and Diversity
3
The Sudden Halt of Ayumi Hamasaki's Shanghai Concert: Unpacking the Rising Sino-Japanese Tensions
4
Apple Poised to Overtake Samsung as World’s Largest Smartphone Maker After 14 Years, Driven by iPhone 17 Success
5
Travel Light, Fly Warm: Korean Air and Asiana Launch Coatroom Service for Winter Travelers
광고문의
임시1
임시3
임시2

Hot Issue

Monopoly or Media Evolution? Netflix-Warner Bros. Deal Triggers Bipartisan Antitrust Fury

Australia's Digital Iron Curtain: The Global Aftershocks of a World-First Social Media Ban

Forging the Drone Warfighter: USAREUR-AF Launches Inaugural Competition in Germany, Stressing Integrated Lethality

Europe at the Crossroads: Environmental Safeguards Under Threat from 'Simplification' Drive

Let’s recycle the old blankets in Jeju Island’s closet instead of incinerating them.

Global Economic Times
korocamia@naver.com
CEO : LEE YEON-SIL
Publisher : KO YONG-CHUL
Registration number : Seoul, A55681
Registration Date : 2024-10-24
Youth Protection Manager: KO YONG-CHUL
Singapore Headquarters
5A Woodlands Road #11-34 The Tennery. S'677728
Korean Branch
Phone : +82(0)10 4724 5264
#304, 6 Nonhyeon-ro 111-gil, Gangnam-gu, Seoul
Copyright © Global Economic Times All Rights Reserved
  • 에이펙2025
  • APEC2025가이드북TV
  • 세종시
Search
Category
  • All articles
  • Synthesis
  • World
  • Business
  • Industry
  • ICT
  • Distribution Economy
  • Well+Being
  • Travel
  • Eco-News
  • Education
  • Korean Wave News
  • Opinion
  • Arts&Culture
  • Sports
  • People & Life
  • Column 
    • 전체
    • Cho Kijo Column
    • Lee Yeon-sil Column
    • Ko Yong-chul Column
    • Cherry Garden Story
  • Photo News
  • New Book Guide
  • Multicultural News
  • Jobs & Workers