The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Afghans report meetings with Taliban

Insurgents deny talks, but video was released online.

- Jawad Sukhanyar and Rod Nordland

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N — 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 meeting 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 Hezbi-Islami, an insurgent faction 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 developmen­t if true.

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

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 member 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 spokesman, 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 informal 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 useful, 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 initiate meaningful peace talks with the Taliban.

Although 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.

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