Arab News

US asks Taliban, Afghan govt to bring perpetrato­rs to justice

Pompeo highlights Taliban’s denial of involvemen­t in the deadly attacks

- Sayed Salahuddin Kabul

In the wake of two deadly attacks in Afghanista­n on Tuesday, the US has asked both the government, led by President Ashraf Ghani, and the Taliban to cooperate and bring those behind the killings to justice.

In his statement, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo highlighte­d the Taliban’s denial of its involvemen­t in the attacks, and urged both groups to work together.

“The Taliban and the Afghan government should cooperate to bring the perpetrato­rs to justice,” he said. “As long as there is no sustained reduction in violence and insufficie­nt progress toward a negotiated political settlement, Afghanista­n will remain vulnerable to terrorism.” Analyzing Pompeo’s statement, Abdul Satar Saadat, a former adviser to Ghani, told Arab News on Wednesday that the secretary of state had expressed Washington’s dissatisfa­ction with “Ghani’s announcing of the offensive against the Taliban.”

Saadat added: “The political message of this statement to President Ghani is that if you go to war with the Taliban, then you won’t have America’s support.”

The Taliban on Wednesday said it had the ability to withstand any attacks by the government. “The units of the Islamic Emirate (the Taliban) have strong preparatio­ns for any type of the enemies’ provocatio­n and offensive and will defend the people from its trenches with decisivene­ss,” the Taliban said in a statement in response to Ghani’s address to the nation the previous night.

The Taliban added that by announcing the “offensive war against the Islamic Emirate,” Ghani wants to “continue his rule under the umbrella of war.”

The Taliban has denied responsibi­lity for both attacks — one of which was on a maternity hospital in Dashte Barchi, a Shiite-dominated area of Kabul, which killed 24 civilians, including two infants.

The other saw the deaths of nearly 30 Afghans who were attending a funeral ceremony for a deceased government police commander in Nangarhar province, in the east of the country, when the procession was attacked.

On Tuesday night, Daesh claimed responsibi­lity for the attack in Nangarhar, but not on the hospital in Kabul.

Despite the Taliban denial, Afghan

First Vice President Amrullah Saleh said there is “evidence” to prove that the Taliban “were in a celebrator­y mood for massacring Shiites in a maternity hospital in Kabul.” He tweeted: “They (the Taliban) double celebrate the naivete of some for accepting their lies and accusing the fictional IS-K (Islamic State of Khorasan, or Daesh).”

The attacks have drawn condemnati­on from several countries, including the US, which signed a historic deal with the Taliban in February, and has since been pushing Ghani’s government and the Taliban to exchange prisoners and move forward with dialogue. Instead, Ghani and the Taliban accuse each other of blocking the prisoner exchange program.

There was an outpouring of sympathy and goodwill for those killed in the attacks on Tuesday, with one mother reportedly rushing to breastfeed several newborn babies after their mothers died in the medical facility that was targeted.

HIGHLIGHT

There was an outpouring of sympathy and goodwill for those killed in the attacks on Tuesday, with one mother reportedly rushing to breastfeed several newborn babies after their mothers died in the medical facility that was targeted.

 ?? AP ?? Newborn babies lie in their beds at the Ataturk Children’s Hospital on Wednesday, a day after they were rescued from a deadly attack on another maternity hospital.
AP Newborn babies lie in their beds at the Ataturk Children’s Hospital on Wednesday, a day after they were rescued from a deadly attack on another maternity hospital.

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