The Star Malaysia

Ceasefire for Eid

Taliban agrees to lay off weapons with Afghan security forces for three days.

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KABUL: The Taliban announced a three-day ceasefire with Afghan security forces for Eid, the holiday that caps off Ramadan, though it said operations against “foreign occupiers” would continue.

But the group warned its fighters would “strongly defend” themselves if attacked, according to a statement sent to the media two days after the Afghan government made its own surprise announceme­nt of a week-long ceasefire with the militants.

It was the first time the Taliban had agreed to a ceasefire for Eid since the US invasion in 2001.

“All the mujahideen are directed to stop offensive operations against Afghan forces for the first three days of Eid-al-Fitr,” the Taliban said in a WhatsApp message.

“But if the mujahideen are

attacked, we will strongly defend (ourselves).”

The Taliban added that “foreign occupiers are the exception” to the order sent to its fighters.

“Our operations will continue against them, we will attack them wherever we see them,” it said.

President Ashraf Ghani on Thursday declared an apparently unilateral week-long ceasefire with the Taliban.

It would last “from the 27th of Ramadan until the fifth day of Eidal-Fitr”, Ghani tweeted from an official account, indicating it could run from June 12-19.

The move came days after a gathering of Afghanista­n’s top clerics in the capital Kabul called for a ceasefire and issued a fatwa against suicide bombings and attacks.

An hour after the fatwa was issued, a suicide bomber detonated outside the gathering, killing seven people.

Ghani said his government supported the clerics’ call.

“The government of Afghanista­n not only supports the unanimous fatwa announceme­nt by the ulemas (scholars), but also backs the recommende­d ceasefire,” he said in a statement released by his office.

In February, Ghani unveiled a plan to open peace talks with the Taliban, including eventually recognisin­g them as a political party. At the time, he also called for a ceasefire.

The insurgents did not officially respond, but announced the launch of their annual spring offensive in an apparent rejection of the plan, one of the most comprehens­ive ever offered by the Afghan government.

Last month, the Pentagon said senior Taliban officials have been secretly negotiatin­g with Afghan officials on a possible ceasefire.

Even such a brief cessation of hostilitie­s would bring welcome relief to civilians in the war-torn country, nearly 17 years after the Taliban regime was toppled.

But if the mujahideen are attacked, we will strongly defend (ourselves). Taliban via WhatsApp

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