Afghan Pavilion at Dubai World Fair Stays Shut After Taliban Takeover
Error: Contact form not found.
by Reuters and Algemeiner Staff

A view shows the Afghanistan pavilion at the Dubai 2020 Expo world fair, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, October 1, 2021. Photo: REUTERS/Alexander Cornwell
Hours after the world expo fair opened in Dubai on Friday, Afghanistan’s exhibition remained closed to visitors in a sign of the challenges facing the country’s new Taliban rulers.
Afghanistan is one of nearly 200 nations participating in the six-month fair that was awarded to Dubai eight years ago and faced a year-long delay to the start due to the pandemic.
But the country’s pavilion, which was organized by the previous Afghan government before it was driven from power by the Taliban last month, remained unfinished and closed to visitors on Friday.
A security guard at the building where the pavilion is located said they had not seen any one work there in weeks.
It was not immediately clear whether the pavilion, listed on signage around the 4.3 sq km (1.7 sq mile) purpose-built site, would open at a later date during the expo fair.
An Expo representative told Reuters that Afghanistan was “one of a small number of pavilions that are not quite ready to open,” without saying when the exhibition would open.
The representative referred further comment to the Afghan pavilion “team” but did not say who that was. The former Afghan government was responsible for the exhibition when it was in office.
The Dubai government and the United Arab Emirates foreign ministry did not respond to Reuters queries.
Expo officials have previously stressed that the event is apolitical.
The Taliban government has so far failed to gain international recognition and its all-male government has faced Western criticism since the Islamist militia seized control of Afghanistan following the withdrawal of foreign forces.
During the Expo opening ceremony on Thursday, the tri-colour flag of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan was displayed among flags of other participating nations.
The Taliban refer to their country as the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and use a different flag.
The UAE, a close ally of the United States, is hosting Afghanistan’s former president, Ashraf Ghani. The Gulf state was also one of only three countries to recognize the Taliban government when they last ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001.
Despite the pavilion’s closure, crowds still gathered outside it on Friday – but in order to enter an outlet of the popular Saudi fast food chain Al Baik housed in the same building.
Irish Band Kneecap Sues Canadian Indigenous Leader for Defamation After Accused of Hamas Support
77 Percent of American Jews Experienced Antisemitism After October 7, New Poll Shows
Brad Lander Endorses Anti-Israel Progressive Candidate Who Hesitated to Condemn Synagogue Terror Attack
The Dream of Chachmei Lublin
Why Is Moses Not Called Mosheh? A Journey Through Biblical History and Translation
The MOU with Iran Is ‘Over’ — Are We Returning to War?
A Room That Stayed Standing
Almost Half of American Muslims Hold “Favorable” View Towards Hamas, Poll Finds
Israel’s Hapoel Tel Aviv Signs NBA Veteran Amir Coffey on One-Year Deal
Silicon Valley’s Language Models Don’t Debunk Persian Language Antisemitism, Report Says





Silicon Valley’s Language Models Don’t Debunk Persian Language Antisemitism, Report Says
Brad Lander Endorses Anti-Israel Progressive Candidate Who Hesitated to Condemn Synagogue Terror Attack
Why Is Moses Not Called Mosheh? A Journey Through Biblical History and Translation
Almost Half of American Muslims Hold “Favorable” View Towards Hamas, Poll Finds
Irish Band Kneecap Sues Canadian Indigenous Leader for Defamation After Accused of Hamas Support



