Taliban to sign contract with UAE's GAAC Holding over airspace control at Afghan airports
[1/2] Ibrahim Moarafi, the General Manager and Regional Director of United Arab Emirates' GAAC, shakes hands with Ghulam Jelani Popal, deputy head of Afghanistan's ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation, as Deputy Prime Minister Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, Minister of Civil Aviation and Transport Mullah Hamidullah Akhundzada and acting Finance Minister Mullah Hidayatullah Badri look on after a news conference in Kabul, Afghanistan, September 8, 2022. REUTERS/Stringer
KABUL, Sept 8 (Reuters) - The Taliban administration announced on Thursday they would sign the third and final major contract for running Afghanistan's airports with the United Arab Emirates' GAAC Holding.
The contract would run for 10 years, Ghulam Jelani Popal, deputy head of Afghanistan's ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation, told reporters at a press conference in Kabul.
He added that the group had already signed contracts with UAE state-linked GAAC over ground services and security.
The agreements would help the Taliban ease their isolation from the outside world, with no foreign country formally recognising their government and strict enforcement of sanctions hampering the economy. It would also hand Abu Dhabi a win in its diplomatic tussle with Qatar for influence. read more
Ibrahim Moarafi, the General Manager and Regional Director of GAAC told reporters in Kabul that it would encourage major international airlines to return to Afghanistan.
"We believe this is the significant development," he said. "We also believe this is a significant development as it will bring economic benefits in terms of job creation."
The Taliban, whose government remains an international pariah without formal recognition, have courted regional powers, including Qatar and Turkey, to operate Kabul airport, landlocked Afghanistan's main air link with the world, and others.
But after months of back-and-forth talks, and at one point raising the possibility of a joint UAE-Turkey-Qatar deal the Taliban in recent months decided to hand operations in their entirety to the UAE, sources had told Reuters in July.
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