Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Afghan officials to meet Taliban ahead of key deal with US

- Reuters

KABUL/DOHA: Afghan officials are set to meet Taliban members in Qatar on Friday ahead of a crucial agreement between the US and Taliban negotiator­s that will set the timeline for the withdrawal of American troops who have been fighting in Afghanista­n for 18 years.

A six-member delegation of junior ministers and a senior security official will hold preliminar­y talks with some Taliban leaders in Qatar’s capital, Doha, two senior government officials in Kabul said, adding that the meeting was a crucial confidence­building mechanism between the warring sides.

A senior official in Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s office said Ghani was reluctant to send a delegation to meet the Taliban before the Us-taliban deal is formalised.

“But he now realises that a meeting is crucial at this juncture. This golden opportunit­y cannot be lost,” said the official, requesting anonymity.

Shepherdin­g the Afghan government and Taliban towards intra-afghan negotiatio­ns has been one of the biggest headaches for US negotiator­s, according to western diplomats in Kabul and Doha.

The seven-day “Reduction in Violence” (RIV) pact that took effect on February 22 and is set to culminate in the signing of an agreement between top US and Taliban negotiator­s on Saturday in Doha, the location of the political headquarte­rs of the hardline insurgent group.

The RIV period has passed off largely successful­ly, and the US and Taliban look set to sign the agreement to establish a timetable for the withdrawal of American troops in exchange for guarantees from the Taliban not to allow militant groups such as al-qaeda to operate in Afghanista­n.

The Us-taliban agreement, if inked on Saturday, would begin a phased withdrawal of American and coalition forces and would also require the Taliban to initiate a formal dialogue with the Afghan government and other political and civil society groups on a permanent nationwide ceasefire and power-sharing in post-war Afghanista­n.

The Taliban now hold sway over half the country, and are at their most powerful since the U.S. invasion in 2001

Senior Taliban commanders in Doha and Afghanista­n said once the deal is signed the group will release 1,000 Afghan prisoners, mostly security personnel and government employees who are in their custody in different parts of the country.

In exchange, the Taliban expects the Afghan government to release their 5,000 fighters.

“We will not join the intra-afghan dialogue if the US and Afghan did not honour their commitment to release our prisoners,” said a senior Taliban commander in Doha.

Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi will attend the signing of a landmark peace deal between the US and the Taliban in Doha.

Special assistant to the prime minister on informatio­n and broadcasti­ng, Firdous Ashiq Awan, said Pakistan “welcomes” the peace agreement between the two sides.

 ?? AFP ?? People release balloons and pigeons as they celebrate the reduction in violence, in Jalalabad, Afghanista­n on Friday.
AFP People release balloons and pigeons as they celebrate the reduction in violence, in Jalalabad, Afghanista­n on Friday.

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