Arab News

Afghan govt to free 900 more Taliban prisoners

Announceme­nt came as a three-day cease-fire with the insurgents draws to an end

- AP Kabul

The Afghan government announced it would free

900 prisoners on Tuesday, its single largest prisoner release since the US and the Taliban signed a peace deal earlier this year that spells out an exchange of detainees between the warring sides.

The announceme­nt came as a three-day cease-fire with the insurgents draws to an end. The Taliban had called for the truce during the Muslim holiday of Eid Al-Fitr that marks the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

There are expectatio­ns that the prisoner release could lead to new reductions in violence, and Taliban officials say they are considerin­g an extension of the cease-fire.

A senior Taliban figure confirmed this to The Associated Press.

“If these developmen­ts, like the announceme­nt of prisoner release continues, it is possible to move forward with decisions like extending the brief cease-fire and to move in a positive direction with some minor issues,” the Taliban official said.

The prisoners were being released from Bagram prison, where the US still maintains a major military base, north of Kabul, as well as from the infamous Pul-eCharkhi prison on the eastern edge of the Afghan capital.

By late afternoon, the AP witnessed scores of men pouring out of the Bagram compound — presumably the released prisoners. It was not immediatel­y possible to verify their numbers or whether they were all Taliban members. The prisoner release is part of the US deal with the Taliban, signed on Feb. 29 to allow for the eventual withdrawal of US and NATO troops from Afghanista­n, bringing to an end the country’s protracted war and America’s longest military involvemen­t.

When the deal was signed, it was touted as Afghanista­n’s best chance for peace after decades of war but political feuding in Kabul and delays in prisoner exchanges have slowed the deal’s progress toward intra-Afghan negotiatio­ns, considered the second and most critical phase of the accord.

Under the deal, Kabul is to release 5,000 Taliban prisoners while the insurgents are to free 1,000 captives they hold, mostly government officials and Afghan forces, before intra-Afghan negotiatio­ns can begin.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani had welcomed the Taliban ceasefire announceme­nt during the Muslim holiday.

Javid Faisal, a national security spokesman in Kabul, urged the Taliban to extend the cease-fire and said the government would release 900 prisoners on Tuesday. That would bring to 2,000 the number of Taliban prisoners released so far under the US-Taliban deal. The Taliban say they have released 240 of captives they held.

However, the Taliban have yet to confirm whether those released so far by the government were among the 5,000 names the insurgents had given US negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad, the architect of the Feb. 29 deal.

A second Taliban official told the AP that those released so far were in fact on the Taliban list of demands, including the uncle of Taliban chief Hibatullah Akhundzada. Key in deciding which names would appear on the list was Mullah Nooruddin Turabi, a senior figure who had recently recovered from COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronaviru­s.

 ?? AP ?? Afghan Taliban prisoners after being freed from Bagram prison by the Afghan government in Kabul on Tuesday.
AP Afghan Taliban prisoners after being freed from Bagram prison by the Afghan government in Kabul on Tuesday.

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