Nelson Mail

Rockets fired as rivals sworn in Afghanista­n

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Afghanista­n’s rival leaders held competing presidenti­al inaugurati­ons yesterday, as the country lurched deeper into political chaos, complicati­ng attempts to start peace talks with the Taliban.

Ashraf Ghani held a swearingin ceremony in Kabul, only for Abdullah Abdullah, his challenger, to proclaim himself president moments later.

Afghan news bulletins showed the rival ceremonies in split screen.

Several rockets landed close to Ghani’s ceremony, highlighti­ng the precarious security in the country 10 days after the US signed a deal with the Taliban to begin a troop withdrawal. US diplomats unsuccessf­ully spent Monday shuttling between the rival camps trying to broker a compromise and prevent a destabilis­ing rift.

Ghani appealed for calm and told supporters he was willing to sacrifice himself for Afghanista­n. No casualties were reported. Islamic State later claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

Afghanista­n now faces competing administra­tions while its leaders are due to begin formal talks with the Taliban aimed at finding a political settlement as US troops withdraw.

Ghani, the incumbent, was declared the official winner of the Sept 2019 poll, but Abdullah claimed he was cheated out of victory. Polling drew a tiny turnout and was marred by insecurity and a convoluted counting and complaints process. Kai Eide, a former UN chief in Afghanista­n, called the situation ‘‘terribly sad and dangerous’’.

‘‘This simply cannot continue,’’ he said. ‘‘Strong unity is required, rivalries.’’

Rahmatulla­h Nabil, a former head of the Afghan intelligen­ce service, said it was a major failure for the US and its allies. He added: ‘‘I am sure they are feeling ashamed with this fake democracy not destructiv­e and their fake technocrat­s. You were part of all these mess, not just Afghans.’’ Zalmay Khalilzad, Donald Trump’s peace envoy to Afghanista­n, was reported to have spent until midnight trying to forge some kind of power sharing agreement between Ghani and Abdullah. Ghani’s offer to give his rival 40 per cent of cabinet posts was rejected.

The stand-off echoed the 2014 election when the US brokered a power-sharing deal and the post of chief executive was created for Abdullah.

Michael Kugelman, the deputy director of the Asia Program at the Washington-based Wilson Centre, said Kabul ‘‘has quite the new political mess on its hands’’.

– Telegraph Group

 ??  ?? Ashraf Ghani
Ashraf Ghani
 ??  ?? Abdullah Abdullah
Abdullah Abdullah

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