City
Epaper

Australia to close Kabul embassy ahead of troops pull-out from Afghanistan

By ANI | Updated: May 25, 2021 08:25 IST

Australia will close its Kabul embassy in three days, ahead of the withdrawal of its final contingent of troops from Afghanistan, informed Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Tuesday.

Open in App

Australia will close its Kabul embassy in three days, ahead of the withdrawal of its final contingent of troops from Afghanistan, informed Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Tuesday.

"Our residential representation in Afghanistan and the Australian Embassy in Kabul will be closed at this time", Morrison and Foreign Minister Marise Payne said in a joint statement.

"In light of the imminent international military withdrawal from Afghanistan, Australia will, as an interim measure revert to the model of visiting accreditation for our diplomatic representation to Afghanistan, which we used from the opening of diplomatic relations in 1969 until 2006," added the statement.

The Australian embassy in Kabul has been open since 2006, reported abc.net.au.

Morrison and Senator Payne said the embassy building would close on May 28, but that officials would visit Afghanistan regularly from a "residential post" elsewhere in the region.

"The departure of the international forces and hence Australian forces from Afghanistan over the next few months brings with it an increasingly uncertain security environment where the government has been advised that security arrangements could not be provided to support our ongoing diplomatic presence," said the joint statement.

"It is Australia's expectation that this measure will be temporary and that we will resume a permanent presence in Kabul once circumstances permit," they said.

"This form of diplomatic representation is common practice around the world."

"It does not alter our commitment to Afghanistan or its people."

Earlier this month Senator Payne visited Afghanistan, reported abc.net.au.

Today's statement said that during the trip she "reaffirmed Australia's support" for, and remained committed to, its relationship with the Afghanistan government.

In 2017 a car bomb in Kabul's diplomatic zone killed several people, and forced the Australian Embassy into lockdown.

The exact location of the embassy is rarely publicly identified, due to security concerns, reported abc.net.au.

Last month, Morrison announced the 80 remaining Australian troops in Afghanistan would be withdrawn in line with the withdrawal of US troops as announced by US President Joe Biden.

The United States began its formal withdrawal earlier this month and will complete it by September 2021.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Australian embassyaustraliaKabulScott MorrisonMarise Payne
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEid Al-Fitr 2025: Australia to Celebrate Ramadan Eid on March 31 and First Day of Shawwal 1446 AH

CricketAustralia: Pak-Origin Player Dies While Playing Cricket In Extreme Heat During Ramadan Fast in Adelaide

Social ViralViral Video Shows Kids Using Dead Python as Skipping Rope in Australia, Internet Reacts

CricketMohammed Shami Ramadan Controversy: India Pacer's Coach Badruddin Siddique Defends Cricketer, Says Desh Ke Aage Kuch Nahin

CricketChampions Trophy 2025: Australia Enters Semi-Finals After Rain Abandoned Match vs Afghanistan

International Realted Stories

InternationalPresident Droupadi Murmu departs for Vatican City to attend state funeral of Pope Francis

InternationalOne soldier killed, three wounded, by sniper fire in Gaza: IDF

International'I will say nothing more': US spokesperson shuns Pak journalist's question over Pahalgam attack

InternationalUnion Minister Rijiju departs for Vatican City to attend State Funeral of Pope Francis

InternationalUK: People gather outside Indian High Commission in support of victims of Pahalgam attack