The Sunday Guardian

TALIBAN VIOLENCE SPIKES DESPITE PEACE DEAL

Attacks in Afghanista­n increased in 2019, as compared to previous years.

- REUTERS KABUL

Afghan government forces and Taliban insurgents waged war against each other in the past 24 hours despite US officials saying there had been a breakthrou­gh in recent days in peace talks to end the 18-year-old conflict.

While negotiator­s from the warring sides pressed on with meetings in Doha, Qatar, the Taliban and the Afghan government both reported fighting on the ground.

The Afghan defence ministry said an air strike had killed a senior Taliban commander in northern Balkh province on Thursday evening. “As result of a targeted air strike by Afghan air forces, Mawlavi Sardar Mohammad, a key member of the Taliban military commission was killed along with eight others,” the ministry said in a statement.

The Taliban did not confirm the air strike. A Taliban spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said the insurgents had killed six Afghan soldiers, including two officers, in an attack on a checkpoint in northern Kunduz province.

Afghan, Taliban and US sources said a peace deal could be signed this month, allowing a withdrawal of some of 13,000 US troops and thousands of other NATO personnel that remain in Afghanista­n following the US interventi­on to oust the Taliban in 2001.

US President Donald Trump said on Thursday there was a “good chance” of reaching an agreement with the Taliban on a reduction of US troops in Afghanista­n. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said an important breakthrou­gh had been made in peace talks with the Taliban in recent days, and Defence Secretary Mark Esper said they had negotiated a proposal for a week-long reduction in violence.

Details about when that was set to begin were not immediatel­y clear but a Taliban official said it would be this week.

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