Austin American-Statesman

Afghans report meetings with Taliban

Insurgents deny talks, but video was released online.

- Jawad Sukhanyar and Rod Nordland

Senior Afghan officials said Sunday that meetings were underway in Turkey between their government and representa­tives of the Taliban, although the insurgents denied that any talks were taking place.

Video footage of the meet- ing was posted online Sunday by Tolo Television, one of Afghanista­n’s leading private networks.

Pictured in the meeting was Abbas Basir of the Wahdat Party, a major faction representi­ng Afghanista­n’s Shiite minority, the Hazaras. The head of that party, Karim Khalili, also leads the Afghan High Peace Council.

Significan­tly, the three-day talks included Hamayoon Jarir, an adviser to President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanista­n and a major figure in Hezb- i-Islami, an insurgent fac- tion that made peace with the government in late 2016.

Azadi Radio described Hezb-i-Islami as playing a mediating role with the Taliban insurgents, which would be a major develop- ment if true.

A senior Afghan official in Kabul confirmed that talks in Istanbul had begun Sat- urday and were to continue through Monday. He said representa­tives of the Taliban were present, but described them as “unof- ficial.”

The video identified four men as Taliban negotiator­s, but reports said that a fifth was also present.

Two of the negotiator­s were identified as known Taliban operatives in the past, according to Sayed Akbar Agha, a former mem- ber of the Taliban now living in Kabul.

Agha said he recognized one of them from the video as Mullah Raouf Akhund, a former provincial governor for the insurgents who appeared to be leading the delegation in Istanbul.

He identified another as Rahmatulla­h Wardak, a former Hezb-i-Islami insurgent who had defected to the Taliban, Agha said.

However, Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban spokes- man, denied in a Twitter that any talks involving representa­tives of the group were taking place.

Mohammad Akram Khpalwak, secretary-general of the High Peace Council, said that the talks in Istanbul were not official, and that any involvemen­t by Khalili, the council’s chief, would have been personal, not official.

“This could be an infor- mal channel trying to talk with the Taliban to convince them to participat­e in the peace process,” he said.

“It is not an HPC initiative. It is not representi­ng the HPC formally.”

But that does not mean the efforts may not be use- ful, Khpalwak said. “We welcome any such move by anyone provided the engagement­s give positive outcomes,” he added.

A spokesman for the office of the Afghan president declined to comment, but said he was unaware of any talks taking place.

If confirmed, the role of Hezb-i-Islami as a mediator with the Taliban would be a significan­t developmen­t in the troubled efforts to initi- ate meaningful peace talks with the Taliban.

Alt h ough the faction fought against the Taliban and against the government previously, it was the first Afghan insurgent group to enter peace talks with Kabul, and it shares many ideologica­l similariti­es with the Taliban.

No formal talks with the Taliban have ever been held, and various indirect efforts have repeatedly failed, most recently in June, in the wake of a truck bombing that killed hundreds at the entrance to the Green Zone, the diplomatic and government quarter.

In 2011, the Taliban assassinat­ed the head of the Afghan High Peace Council, Barhanuddi­n Rabbani, by sending a supposed peace envoy who had a bomb hidden in his turban.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States