San Francisco Chronicle

100 Taliban prisoners freed

- By Rahim Faiez and Tameem Akhgar Rahim Faiez and Tameem Akhgar are Associated Press writers.

KABUL — Afghanista­n released 100 Taliban prisoners Wednesday, claiming they were among 5,000 detainees to be freed under a deal between insurgents and the U.S. The Taliban said, however, they have yet to verify those released were on the list they handed over to Washington during negotiatio­ns.

The prisoner release is a critical first step to intra-Afghan negotiatio­ns aimed at bringing an end to decades of war in Afghanista­n. The U.S.Taliban deal signed in February also calls for the Taliban to free 1,000 government personnel they hold hostage.

Jawed Faisal, spokesman for Afghanista­n’s National Security adviser, said the 100 were released from the base in Bagram, near Kabul, on Wednesday.

Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen said the insurgent group doesn’t know who the government is releasing without verificati­on. He said the Taliban withdrew a technical team to oversee the releases because of delays by the government. In a tweet, Shaheen admonished the government for refusing to release the first 15 Taliban they requested who were on the list.

“They should be released based on our list,” Shaheen said. The list of Taliban and government personnel to be released were part of the negotiatio­ns that led to the signing of the U.S.Taliban peace deal.

Meanwhile, in recent days Washington has expressed its frustratio­n with the political turmoil in Kabul as President Ashraf Ghani and his rival in last year’s presidenti­al polls squabble over power sharing amid allegation­s of election fraud.

Earlier this week, the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs tweeted a harsh statement expressing frustratio­n at the continued political turmoil roiling Kabul.

The State Department tweeted, “As the world gets slammed by COVID19, with devastatin­g economic consequenc­es for all, donors are frustrated and fed up by personal agendas being advanced ahead of the welfare of the Afghan people.”

Afghanista­n has imposed a lockdown in several cities to curb the virus and has so far recorded 444 confirmed cases and 14 deaths.

 ?? Rahmat Gul / Associated Press ?? Afghan National Army soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint near the Bagram air base near Kabul, where the 100 Taliban detainees were released.
Rahmat Gul / Associated Press Afghan National Army soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint near the Bagram air base near Kabul, where the 100 Taliban detainees were released.

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