Kuwait Times

NOTORIOUS AFGHAN WARLORD URGES END TO ‘UNHOLY WAR’

HEKMATYAR ADDRESSES FOLLOWERS IN PUBLIC SPEECH

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MEHTAR LAM, Afghanista­n: In his first public speech since signing a peace deal with the Afghan government, one of Afghanista­n’s most notorious warlords yesterday called for the Taleban to stop fighting and begin negotiatio­ns.

“I invite you to join the peace caravan and stop the pointless, meaningles­s and unholy war,” Gulbuddin Hekmatyar said to a gathering of his followers and Afghan politician­s in Laghman province, east of the capital, Kabul. “I want a free, proud, independen­t and Islamic Afghanista­n,” he said.

In February the United Nations Security Council agreed to drop sanctions against Hekmatyar, paving the way for him to return openly to Afghanista­n. The Afghan government requested the move as part of a peace deal with Hekmatyar and his militant group, Hezb-i-Islami, in September.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani welcomed Hekmatyar’s public return, saying the former strongman would cooperate with the government. “Hezb-iIslami leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s return will have remarkable effects on peace, stability, prosperity and developmen­t in all aspects,” Ghani’s office said in a statement. The deal has been criticized by some Afghans and human rights groups for the pardon it granted to Hekmatyar and many of his fighters. Hekmatyar’s return “will compound the culture of impunity”, Human Rights Watch researcher Patricia Gossman said of the deal, calling it an “affront” to victims of abuses.

A controvers­ial figure from the insurgency against the Soviets in the 1980s and the civil wars of the 1990s, Hekmatyar is accused of ordering his fighters to bombard Kabul, leading to many casualties, besides other abuses. His faction of Hezb-i-Islami has played a relatively small role in the current conflict, in which the Taleban have a leading role in battling the Westernbac­ked government in Kabul.

In hiding for nearly a decade and a half, Hekmatyar had been designated a “global terrorist” by the United States, which has been leading an internatio­nal military mission in Afghanista­n for the past 15 years. American and other Western leaders praised the deal with him, however, hoping it could help lead to wider peace in Afghanista­n. — Reuters

 ?? —AFP ?? KABUL: Afghan warlord and ex-prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar gestures as he speaks at a rally in Laghman province yesterday.
—AFP KABUL: Afghan warlord and ex-prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar gestures as he speaks at a rally in Laghman province yesterday.

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