BusinessMirror

Taliban return to Doha set stage for Afghan peace talks i

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Slamabad — Taliban officials say a senior delegation returned early Saturday to Qatar, paving the way for the start of peace talks with the afghan government that are expected to take place in the tiny Gulf state.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The delayed negotiatio­ns are the second, critical part to a peace deal the US signed with the Taliban in February in Doha.

The Taliban delegation's arrival in Qatar, where the group keeps its political office, came as a top afghan government body blamed the militants for delays in starting talks.

in a tweet on Saturday, the spokesman for Kabul's high Council for national Reconcilia­tion, Faraidoon Khwazoon, said the government was ready to start direct negotiatio­ns.

"The process of releasing the prisoners is over and there is no excuse for delaying the talks, but the Taliban are still not ready to take part in the talks, " he said, without further elaboratio­n.

in a surprise late night Saturday tweet, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah mujahed announced a shakeup in the Taliban negotiatio­n team. The Taliban's Chief Justice abdul hakim has been named the lead negotiator replacing Sher mohammad abbas Stanikzai, who will be deputy negotiator. The appointmen­t of hakim, who is close to the Taliban leader hibatullah akhunzada, brings the Taliban's negotiatin­g team to 21. There was no explanatio­n for the sudden changes.

Until its February deal with the US, the Taliban refused to directly negotiate with the afghan government. The current Kabul negotiatin­g team is a collection of government and opposition officials. The US State Department said in a statement Saturday that its envoy Zalmay Khalilzad who brokered the February peace deal left for Qatar on the previous day to press for an "immediate" start to negotiatio­ns between the warring afghan sides.

Washington has ramped up pressure on afghans on both sides of the conflict to open up negotiatio­ns over what a post-war afghanista­n might look like, how rights of women and minorities would be protected, and how the tens of thousands of armed Taliban and government-allied militias are disarmed and re-integrated.

"The afghan people are ready for a sustainabl­e reduction in violence and a political settlement that will end the war," the State Department statement said.

The US Security adviser Robert O'brien had a long call with afghan President ashraf Ghani last week. american officials have also pressed neighborin­g Pakistan to get the Taliban to the table. AP

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