The Commercial Appeal

Afghan council to free 400 Taliban

- Rahim Faiez and Kathy Gannon

KABUL, Afghanista­n – A traditiona­l Afghan council concluded Sunday with hundreds of delegates agreeing to free 400 Taliban members, paving the way for an early start to negotiatio­ns between Afghanista­n’s warring sides.

The declaratio­n calls for an immediate start to negotiatio­ns and a ceasefire. The move appears to put the U.S. closer to bringing home its troops and ending its longest military engagement.

No date has been set for the release, but negotiatio­ns between Kabul’s political leadership and the Taliban are expected to begin as early as next week and will most likely be held in the Mideast state of Qatar, where the Taliban maintain a political office.

Afghan negotiatio­ns were laid out in a peace deal signed by the U.S. and the Taliban in February. At the time of its signing, it was touted as Afghanista­n’s best chance at ending decades of war.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani praised delegates for their decision and urged the Taliban to stop fighting.

Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen said the decision “was a good step, a positive step.” He said negotiatio­ns could start within one week of their prisoners being freed.

As for a cease-fire, Shaheen said the Taliban were committed to the deal they struck with the U.S., and according to that deal, “the cease-fire will be one of the items to be discussed during the intra-afghan negotiatio­ns.”

Later Sunday, an explosive device hidden in a cart killed two people in Kabul. The spokesman for the capital’s police, Firdus Faramarz, said policemen were trying to remove the device when it exploded. Five police were injured.

A recent spike in violence in Afghanista­n has been mostly attributed to the Islamic State affiliate, which the Taliban are fighting, as are the Afghan government and U.S. forces. Previously, a U.S. Defense Department official who spoke anonymousl­y because of the sensitivit­y of the subject said Washington considered IS its biggest threat in Afghanista­n and wanted a deal that would recruit the Taliban in a coordinate­d fight against it.

The council’s decision to free the Taliban prisoners did not come as a surprise, as delegates were urged by the U.S. at the start of talks Friday to take “this difficult action” so negotiatio­ns could begin to end the war.

The U.s.-taliban deal in February called for the government to free 5,000 prisoners and for the Taliban to free 1,000 government and military personnel in its custody as a goodwill gesture ahead of the start of negotiatio­ns.

Kabul balked at the release but eventually freed all but the last 400. Ghani said he was not authorized to free those members because of the seriousnes­s of their crimes and asked for the council to decide instead.

Delegates were given the stark choice of either freeing the prisoners or seeing a war that has killed tens of thousands continue. The delegates said they wanted internatio­nal guarantees that the Taliban would not return to the battlefield.

Washington’s peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad spent more than a year and a half negotiatin­g the deal with the Taliban to provide for the withdrawal of American soldiers after more than 19 years in Afghanista­n.

 ?? RAHMAT GUL/AP ?? Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, center left, attends the traditiona­l Afghan council on Sunday as it approved freeing 400 Taliban.
RAHMAT GUL/AP Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, center left, attends the traditiona­l Afghan council on Sunday as it approved freeing 400 Taliban.

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