Afghanistan's Taliban authorities on Saturday criticised the UN Security Council's plan for a special envoy to promote gender and human rights in the country as "unnecessary".
The Taliban government is not officially recognised by any country or world body, and the United Nations refers to the administration as the "Taliban de facto authorities".
Many are torn over engaging with Kabul's rulers in a bid to roll back their controls on women and girls, or freezing them out until they make concessions such as reopening educational opportunities for females.
On Friday, the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) adopted a resolution calling for the appointment of a special envoy for Afghanistan to increase engagement with the country and its Taliban leaders.
But foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi said a new envoy "is unnecessary as Afghanistan is not a conflict zone and is ruled by a central government that is able to secure its national interests". In a post on social media site X, he said the Taliban government welcomes "more robust and enhanced engagement" with the UN, but special envoys "have complicated situations further via imposition of external solutions".
"The approach of the government of Afghanistan will ultimately be guided by the unaltered religious beliefs, cultural values and national interests of the people of Afghanistan," he said on X, formerly known as Twitter. Since the Taliban surged back to power in August 2021, Kabul's new rulers have insisted on their right to impose harsh social controls in accordance with their austere interpretation of Islam.