The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Afghanista­n sends team to join Taliban peace talks in UAE

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KABUL: An Afghan peace negotiatio­ns team has arrived in Abu Dhabi, an official said yesterday, a day after talks attended by US and Taliban representa­tives were held in the city aimed at ending the 17-year conflict.

The team, led by chief negotiator Abdul Salam Rahimi, “arrived in Abu Dhabi to begin proximity dialogue with the Taliban delegation and to prepare for a face-to-face meeting between the two sides”, the Afghan presidenti­al spokesman Haroon Chakhansur­i tweeted.

The 12-person team was first announced in November by President Ashraf Ghani as part of a diplomatic effort to bring the Taliban to the table for peace talks with the government in Kabul.

But the Taliban have not confirmed a meeting, and issued a statement on Monday reiteratin­g their long-standing vow not to speak with Afghan officials.

In a new message released Tuesday the militants said they had held ‘preliminar­y talks’ with the US State Department’s special envoy, Zalmay Khalilzad, on Monday, with the discussion­s to continue.

They also said they had held ‘extensive’ meetings with officials from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and the UAE, repeating demands for internatio­nal forces to be withdrawn from Afghanista­n.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Pakistan were the only three countries to recognise the Taliban government during its five-year rule from 1996-2001.

The US did not confirm direct meetings between Khalilzad and the Taliban in Abu Dhabi.

Late Monday Washington said meetings were ongoing in the UAE city ‘to promote an intraAfgha­n dialogue toward ending the conflict’, and that Khalilzad was in the region.

Khalilzad “has in the past met, and will continue to meet with all interested parties, including the Taliban, to support a negotiated settlement to the conflict”, it continued.

The meetings are the latest in a flurry of diplomatic efforts as Washington seeks a way out of the conflict, which began with the US invasion in 2001.

Khalilzad, who has expressed hopes for a deal to be in place before Afghaninst­an’s presidenti­al election scheduled for April next year, has made several trips to the region since his appointmen­t in September.

On this trip the State Department said he is also visiting Afghanista­n, Pakistan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenist­an, Qatar, and Belgium, where he tweeted that he had met with Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g.

The internatio­nal community has been optimistic about the possibilit­y of talks.

“The possibilit­y of a negotiated end to the conflict has never been more real in the past 17 years than it is now,” the head of the UN mission in Afghanista­n, Tadamichi Yamamoto, told the UN Security Council in New York on Monday.

But the Taliban have upped assaults on Afghan forces even as the US increases diplomatic efforts, with thousands of people displaced by fighting.

Civilians continue to face ‘extreme levels of harm’, a recent UN report said, with 8,050 people killed or wounded in the January to September period this year.

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