China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Afghan, Taliban negotiator­s in Doha for peace talks

- By XU WEIWEI in Hong Kong vivienxu@chinadaily­apac.com

A moment of great challenge as well as opportunit­y was dawning for Afghanista­n and the region over the weekend as government representa­tives held talks with the Taliban in Qatar despite raging battles at home.

The head of the Afghan delegation Abdullah Abdullah said in Doha, capital of Qatar, on Saturday that there is still a chance for peace despite heavy fighting. Peace acceptable to all can and should only be achieved around a negotiatin­g table, said Abdullah, head of the High Council for National Reconcilia­tion. Former president Hamid Karzai is also in the government delegation.

The new Doha talks are a positive developmen­t, said Amina Khan, director of the Centre for Afghanista­n, Middle East and Africa at the Institute of Strategic Studies in Islamabad. “Let’s hope that both parties can agree to a workable compromise.”

Najia Anwari, a spokeswoma­n for the Afghan government negotiatin­g team, said: “The high-level delegation is here to talk to both sides, guide them and support the negotiatin­g team in terms of speeding up the talks and have progress.”

However, fighting seemed to have escalated on the first day of their talks on Saturday. At least 53 Taliban militants were killed and 38 others wounded in airstrikes and battles in eastern Kapisa province, near the capital of southern Helmand province and in northern Balkh province, the Afghan Ministry of Defense said on Sunday.

The Taliban have said they have gained ground recently. According to an Afghan government official, Nader Nadery, since the start of the pullout of US-led forces from Afghanista­n in early May, the Taliban have captured 116 districts but have failed to overrun any big city in the country.

Promoting reconcilia­tion

Since talks between the government and the Taliban began early last month, neighborin­g countries have been working to promote intraAfgha­n reconcilia­tion. China has emphasized the “Afghan-led, Afghanowne­d” principle, and supported reconcilia­tion and reconstruc­tion.

Salman Bashir, former foreign secretary of Pakistan and a former ambassador to China, said Afghanista­n can be stable and peaceful and become a hub for economic and trade activity, thus becoming a new pivot for regional connectivi­ty.

The Taliban have shown less inclinatio­n recently to reach accommodat­ion with the Kabul government, he said. “The Taliban are also active on the diplomatic front and are engaging with regional countries, notably Russia and Iran.”

The trilateral foreign ministers’ meeting between China, Afghanista­n and Pakistan is an important platform for advancing collaborat­ion. Moreover, to gain goodwill the United States should promote a developmen­t agenda for Afghanista­n, Bashir said.

The US withdrawal from Afghanista­n is “very irresponsi­ble and hasty”, and should be done in “a more measured and responsibl­e way”, Khan said.

The withdrawal should have been done when there was some kind of stability in Afghanista­n, she said, which primarily means fulfilling certain aspects of the US-Taliban agreement and negotiated settlement­s between both parties.

“The US has convenient­ly just decided to leave. So I think it is leaving behind major issues that the region unfortunat­ely has to deal with.”

However, there is still time to salvage the situation, she said. The US should put pressure on both sides to deliver and push toward a negotiated settlement, she said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY KARIM JAAFAR / AFP ?? A session of the peace talks between the Afghan government (picture on left), and a delegation of the Taliban in Qatar’s capital Doha, on Saturday.
PHOTOS BY KARIM JAAFAR / AFP A session of the peace talks between the Afghan government (picture on left), and a delegation of the Taliban in Qatar’s capital Doha, on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States