Saturday, January 3, 2026
News

Afghan Foreign Minister says "technical error" on excluding women to earlier press conference

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi | October 12, 2025 4:16:33 PM IST
Visiting Afghanistan's Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi on Sunday said that not inviting women to a press conference held in New Delhi was not intentional but a result of a "technical issue."

Responding to growing backlash from Indian media and politicians, Muttaqi clarified that the decision was not based on gender discrimination.

"With regards to the press conference, it was on short notice and a short list of journalists was decided," Muttaqi said. "The participation list that was presented was very specific. It was more a technical issue... Our colleagues had decided to send an invitation to a specific list of journalists and there was no other intention apart from this."

Muttaqi called another press interaction today this time inviting women journalists to attend.

Earlier this week, several women journalists and media outlets had expressed outrage after they were not invited to attend the Foreign Minister's press briefing in Delhi after bilateral talks with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar.

On Saturday, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) clarified that it had no involvement in the press interaction held by Afghanistan's Foreign Minister Muttaqi in New Delhi on Friday, which later sparked controversy after reports emerged that women journalists were allegedly barred from attending.

"MEA had no involvement in the press interaction held yesterday by the Afghan FM in Delhi," the ministry said in a statement.

The press conference was , organised at the Afghanistan Embassy in New Delhi following bilateral talks between External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and Muttaqi, drew widespread criticism after women journalists claimed they were denied entry.

During the press conference, Muttaqi addressed regional issues, including India-Afghanistan relations, humanitarian assistance, trade routes, and security cooperation. Only selected male journalists and officials of Afghan embassy attended the presser.

The exclusion of women journalists sparked political outrage nationwide. Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra on Saturday demanded that Prime Minister Narendra Modi clarify his position on the incident, calling it "an insult to India's women journalists.

"In a post on X, she said, "Prime Minister Narendra Modi ji, please clarify your position on the removal of female journalists from the press conference of the representative of the Taliban on his visit to India. If your recognition of women's rights isn't just convenient posturing from one election to the other, then how has this insult to some of India's most competent women been allowed in our country, a country whose women are its backbone and its pride." (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE WORLD NEWS
Winners of Khalifa Award for Education t...
Canada seeks probe after Air India pilot...
7 dead, dozens missing after migrant boa...
Violent protests erupt across Iran over ...
Swiss bar fire in Crans-Montana claims 4...
Earthquake of magnitude 3.5 hits Bhutan...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
2026 to be year of results, good governa...
'Direct blow to common man': Karnataka C...
ED attaches assets worth Rs 33.66 crore ...
Kerala CM notes 'hectic day'; didn't hav...
Bhupinder Hooda slams Haryana Govt over ...
'Attack on India's pluralism': Congress'...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
After Mamdani, 8 US lawmakers pledg... 
"Not appropriate to talk about Shah... 
"BJP and their "Vichar Parivaar": C... 
USA cautions China to pull back as ... 
Russia shares evidence with US afte... 
Experts say GST collections show re... 
Uttarakhand DG Intelligence Abhinav... 
J-K: Organic farming boom in Rajour...