Shanghai Daily

US envoy’s Kabul visit raises peace talk hopes

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ZALMAY Khalilzad, the US envoy who led talks with the Taliban until negotiatio­ns collapsed last month, was in Kabul yesterday meeting top Afghan officials including President Ashraf Ghani.

His visit comes amid speculatio­n the US is attempting to restart the effort to end America’s longest war, after the US President Donald Trump last month declared talks “dead.”

Khalilzad’s arrival in Kabul coincided with the announceme­nt that preliminar­y results from recent presidenti­al elections will be delayed for nearly a month, a lengthy postponeme­nt likely to stoke political uncertaint­y and fraud allegation­s.

“Khalilzad met the president and briefed him about his recent activities,” Ghani’s spokesman Sediq Seddiqi said. “His viewpoints and the stance of the Afghan government for peace were discussed.”

The US embassy in Kabul declined to comment but officials said Khalilzad may next stop in Pakistan, which he also visited earlier this month and met informally with Taliban representa­tives.

Ahead of that visit, a senior Taliban source in Pakistan said that the group had not “backtracke­d” from talks, suggesting the ball was in America’s court.

Experts said the US may want to resume its quest to pull troops out of Afghanista­n but first wants to see some sort of Taliban concession, such as a reduction in violence.

Delayed vote count

Ghani, whose government was cut out of negotiatio­ns, had sharply criticized the draft deal that was thought to be on the verge of completion following a year of negotiatio­ns.

Afghans went to the polls for a first-round vote on September 28 and initial results were to have been released on October 19. But more than a week after saying the Independen­t Election Commission would miss that deadline, commission chairwoman Hawa Alam Nuristani said the results now would not be released until November 14.

“We have already apologized for missing the date but this doesn’t mean failure,” Nuristani said.

“This (election) is a fate-determinin­g issue in the country and we cannot accept sacrificin­g transparen­cy for speed.”

Officials cited several technical issues slowing the count, including an attempt to hack the German company that provided biometric machines designed to prevent duplicate votes.

(AFP)

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