The National - News

AFGHAN LEADER SEEKS TALIBAN DIALOGUE

▶ Despite a series of deadly terrorist attacks, the president is holding out an olive branch to the extremists

- RUCHI KUMAR Kabul

President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanista­n yesterday presented a detailed peace offer to the Taliban leadership, outlining a deal for negotiatio­ns that could meet the group’s demands for political recognitio­n and release of prisoners.

The first day of the Kabul Process, a conference to push forward Afghan-led peace talks, started with Mr Ghani’s appeal for a ceasefire, after the Taliban’s bloody insurgency since it was toppled from government in late 2001.

The Afghan president also acknowledg­ed the need for engagement with Pakistan. The two countries’ relations have plummeted in the past two years, with border skirmishes and accusation­s from Kabul that Pakistan continues to provide shelter to attackers who besiege Afghan cities.

The violence has added to the millions of Afghan refugees living in Pakistan.

The two-day conference includes delegates from 25 countries and several internatio­nal organisati­ons.

“We will be ready to start talks with Pakistan and forget the past and start a new chapter,” Mr Ghani said.

Among the courtesies extended, Afghanista­n’s government would be willing to provide passports to Taliban members and visas to their families, allow the group to open a political office in Kabul, and the government would work to remove sanctions against the group’s leaders.

The key document, Offering Peace: Framing the Kabul Conference, stressed an urgent need for a political process, without violence and conflict.

“The ball is in the Taliban’s court now,” Aziz Amin Ahmadzai, a security analyst who has worked closely with Mr Ghani’s office in the past, told The National.

“The president has put forward a very comprehens­ive and inclusive peace plan, which was formed after meetings with political elites of across the country to form a consensus in their approach.

“Now the Taliban should approach the Afghan people because eventually it will have to be an intra-Afghan dialogue that can address their grievances.”

A resurgent Taliban has been blamed for much of the increased violence in Afghanista­n since US and Nato forces concluded combat missions in 2014. The recent attacks have underscore­d the weaknesses of Afghan security forces more than 16 years since the US-led invasion toppled the Taliban.

Alice Wells, the US Deputy Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asia, has said the United States has kept the door open for dialogue with the Taliban.

The Taliban in a statement on Monday called on US officials to talk directly to their political office regarding a peaceful solution to the fighting.

Mr Ghani’s offer, made “without any conditions”, however, raised flags among some groups in Afghanista­n, particular­ly after the recent spate of attacks.

“I am cautious about this new deal,” said Dr Simi Yousefi, referring to the destructio­n of civilian lives and property she has seen growing up under the Taliban.

“We have seen and experience­d their extremism first hand. I am not confident the Taliban will change their minds and policies so easily.”

On January 27, a Taliban attacker drove an ambulance filled with explosives into the heart of Kabul, killing at least 103 people and wounding as many as 235.

And a week earlier the militants stormed a luxury hotel in Kabul, killing 22 people, including 14 foreigners, and setting off a 13-hour battle with security forces.

Among the document’s contents is an assurance that the rights of women would be safeguarde­d, with a government delegation appointed by the High Peace Council to include women and civil society members. “Women, who fear loss of their rights and gains, must be particular­ly engaged and kept informed,” it reads.

The role to be played by the US remains an issue, however. Its forces continue to target Taliban training camps and other positions. Such attacks have intensifie­d in recent months against Taliban, ISIL and other groups.

“One week they bomb them, the next week they want to make peace.

“I don’t understand these quickly changing policies of the government and the Americans,” Dr Yousefi said.

The Afghan president also acknowledg­ed the need for engagement with Pakistan

 ?? Reuters ?? The Afghan President, Ashraf Ghani, and Indonesia’s Vice President, Muhammad Jusuf Kalla, yesterday during the peace and security co-operation conference in Kabul
Reuters The Afghan President, Ashraf Ghani, and Indonesia’s Vice President, Muhammad Jusuf Kalla, yesterday during the peace and security co-operation conference in Kabul

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates