Muscat Daily

US envoy slams Afghan bloodshed after blast

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Kabul, Afghanista­n - A top US envoy slammed Afghanista­n’s ‘distressin­gly high’ levels of bloodshed on Monday after a car bombing at a police headquarte­rs killed at least 16 people and wounded scores more.

The latest remarks by veteran diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad, who negotiated a withdrawal deal with the Taliban in February, come as spiralling violence across Afghanista­n imperils ongoing peace talks between the Kabul government and the Taliban.

‘Continued high levels of violence can threaten the peace process and the agreement and the core understand­ing that there is no military solution,’ Khalilzad said on Twitter.

‘Violence today remains distressin­gly high in spite of the recent reaffirmat­ion of the need for substantia­l reduction.’

On Sunday, a car bomb near the police headquarte­rs in the western province of Ghor left 16 people dead and 154 wounded, local hospital head Mohammad Omar Lalzad said on Monday.

Five children, nine women and 26 members of the security forces were among the wounded.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, but Afghan officials blamed the Taliban.

In the country’s southern province of Helmand, thousands of families have been forced to flee their homes in recent days as fierce fighting erupted between the Taliban and government forces.

The violence continues even though Khalilzad last week claimed the Taliban had assured US forces they would reduce attacks and casualties.

US influence over Afghanista­n’s battlegrou­nds is on the wane, with the Pentagon looking to withdraw all its remaining troops by next May.

President Donald Trump has said US forces should return even sooner, raising questions about Washington’s insistence that its withdrawal from Afghanista­n after 19 years of war is really ‘conditions-based’.

The Taliban have been quick to exploit the apparent lack of resolve, and began to push for fresh military gains as soon as they signed the withdrawal deal with the US.

“The belief that says violence must escalate to win concession­s at the negotiatin­g table is very risky. Such an approach can undermine the peace process and repeats past miscalcula­tions by Afghan leaders,” Khalilzad said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani (right) meets with the chairman of the High Council for National Reconcilia­tion of Afghanista­n Abdullah Abdullah in the capital Tehran on Monday
(AFP) Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani (right) meets with the chairman of the High Council for National Reconcilia­tion of Afghanista­n Abdullah Abdullah in the capital Tehran on Monday

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