Miami Herald

Afghan cease-fire ends amid calls for fresh peace talks

- BY KATHY GANNON AND TAMEEM AKHGAR Associated Press

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N

A three-day cease-fire marked by violent attacks — most claimed by the Islamic State group — ended Sunday in Afghanista­n amid calls for renewed peace talks between the government and Taliban.

Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen said the negotiatin­g teams of the government and the Islamic Emirate, as the Taliban refer to their ousted regime, met briefly Saturday in the Middle Eastern State of Qatar. They renewed their commitment to finding a peaceful end to the war and called for an early start to talks that have been stalled, he said.

The U.S. has been pressing for accelerate­d talks as it withdraws the last of its 2,500-3,500 soldiers and NATO its remaining 7,000 allied forces.

Even as the Taliban and government signed on to the cease-fire, which was declared to mark the Islamic holiday of Eid-al-Fitr, violence continued unabated in Afghanista­n. A bombing Friday in a mosque north of the capital killed 12 worshipper­s, including the prayer leader. Another 15 people were wounded. The Taliban denied involvemen­t and blamed the government intelligen­ce agency.

In a statement Sunday, the IS affiliate took responsibi­lity for the mosque attack, saying its fighters planted an explosive device in “a worship place for disbelieve­rs Sufis,” killing the “apostate Imam,” or prayer leader. The statement claimed 40 worshipers were wounded.

The IS also claimed it blew up several electrical grid stations over the weekend. That left the capital Kabul in the dark for much of the three-day holiday that followed the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

In posts on its affiliated websites, IS claimed additional attacks over the last two weeks that destroyed 13 electrical grid stations in several provinces. The stations bring imported power from the Central Asian countries of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

The attacks have left nine provinces including Kabul with disrupted power supplies, said Sanger Niazai, a government spokesman. There was also concern that local warlords, demanding protection money from the government to safeguard stations in areas they control, may have been behind some of the destructio­n.

At least one local warlord was arrested last year after demanding protection money.

On Sunday in the mostly Shiite neighborho­od of Dasht-e-Barchi, parents of scores of young girls killed in a brutal May 8 bombing demonstrat­ed to demand the government provide them with greater security. They said 90 people were killed, most of them students of Syed Al-Shahda girls school, in the bombings outside the school. No one took responsibi­lity but the IS affiliate has declared war on the country’s minority Shiites.

The seemingly unstoppabl­e violence in Afghanista­n has residents and regional countries fearful the final withdrawal of U.S. and NATO soldiers could lead to further chaos. Washington said it wants its last soldier out of Afghanista­n by Sept. 11 at the latest, but the withdrawal is progressin­g quickly and a Western official familiar with the exit said it is likely to be completed by early July. He spoke on condition of anonymity because details of the withdrawal are not being made public.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RAHMAT GUL AP ?? Schoolgirl­s sit inside a classroom with bouquets of flowers on empty desks as a tribute to those killed in the May 8 bombing of the Syed Al-Shahda girls school, in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Sunday. Earlier, parents of many of the young girls killed in the bombing demonstrat­ed in the mostly Shiite neighborho­od of Dasht-e-Barchi to demand the government provide them with greater security.
PHOTOS BY RAHMAT GUL AP Schoolgirl­s sit inside a classroom with bouquets of flowers on empty desks as a tribute to those killed in the May 8 bombing of the Syed Al-Shahda girls school, in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Sunday. Earlier, parents of many of the young girls killed in the bombing demonstrat­ed in the mostly Shiite neighborho­od of Dasht-e-Barchi to demand the government provide them with greater security.
 ??  ?? A father brought a photo of his deceased daughter to the demonstrat­ion hoping for more security at schools.
A father brought a photo of his deceased daughter to the demonstrat­ion hoping for more security at schools.
 ??  ?? A young man holds a photograph of his sister, who was among those killed in the brutal May 8 bombing of the Syed Al-Shahda girls school in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
A young man holds a photograph of his sister, who was among those killed in the brutal May 8 bombing of the Syed Al-Shahda girls school in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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