Qatar Tribune

Dozens dead in overnight clashes in Afghanista­n as peace talks continue

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FIERCE fighting between Afghan forces and the Taliban killed dozens in a restive eastern province, officials said on Thursday, as negotiator­s from both sides pushed ahead with peace talks.

Overnight clashes erupted in three districts of Nangarhar province when Taliban fighters attacked several checkpoint­s of Afghan forces and pro-government militiamen, Ataullah Khogyani, spokesman for the Nangarhar governor told AFP.

He said at least 11 Afghan security personnel were killed in fighting in Hesarak, while eight pro-government militiamen were killed in Khogyani.

Khogyani said about 30 Taliban fighters died in the clashes -- including some foreigners.

The hardline insurgent group has not commented on the fighting.

The latest violence comes as the Afghan government and Taliban are engaged in talks in

Doha aimed at ending the longrunnin­g conflict.

Afghanista­n’s acting Defence Minister Asadullah Khalid blamed the Taliban for the fighting.

“There have been no attacks from our side... The enemies continue to attack and spill the blood of Afghans,” he said at a ceremony where US forces handed over four A-29 Super Tucano aircraft to the Afghan military.

Abdullah Abdullah, the head of the peace process for the Afghan government, said the ongoing talks offered an opportunit­y to end the war.

The two warring sides are at the negotiatin­g table, a first in the three decades since the Taliban emerged as a movement across Afghanista­n, Abdullah said.

“We recognise the need to get together, to sit together, to present our views which are different from one another, but to find ways how to reconcile those difference­s,” Abdullah told Doha-based Al-Jazeera TV in an interview released on Thursday.

He said negotiatio­ns aim to “find ways to be able (to) live together while maintainin­g some difference­s and fighting for it politicall­y rather than through violence”.

In his speech at the opening session of the peace talks on Saturday, Abdullah had called for an immediate humanitari­an ceasefire, but his plea has gone unanswered.

The Taliban have long worried that reducing violence could lessen their leverage, but have implemente­d two temporary ceasefires this year itself.

Officials said the latest clashes had killed at least 11 Afghan security personnel, eight pro-government militiamen, and about 30 Taliban fighters

 ?? (AGENCIES) ?? The latest violence comes as the Afghan government and Taliban are engaged in talks in Doha aimed at ending the long-running conflict.
(AGENCIES) The latest violence comes as the Afghan government and Taliban are engaged in talks in Doha aimed at ending the long-running conflict.

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