DOHA: Representatives of the Afghan government and Taleban insurgents met in Doha for talks yesterday as violence raged in their country with foreign forces almost entirely withdrawn. The two sides have been meeting on and off for months in the Qatari capital, but the talks have lost momentum as the insurgents made battlefield gains.
Several high-ranking officials, including former Afghan former chief executive Abdullah Abdullah, gathered in a luxury hotel yesterday after morning prayers. They were joined by negotiators from the Taleban's political office in Doha. Former president Hamid Karzai had also been due to travel to Doha but remained in Kabul, according to a source. US special envoy on Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad was present as the two sides began to meet, an AFP correspondent said.
"The high level delegation is here to talk to both sides, guide them and support the (government) negotiating team in terms of speeding up the talks and have progress," said Najia Anwari, the spokeswoman for the Afghan government negotiating team in Doha. "We expect that it (will) speed the talks and... in a short time, both sides will reach a result and we will witness a durable and dignified peace in Afghanistan," she told AFP. The sides were meeting behind closed doors after a brief interaction with the media.
The Taleban have capitalized on the last stages of the withdrawal of US and other foreign troops from Afghanistan to launch a series of lightning offensives across the country. "We are ready for dialogue, for talks and negotiations, and our priority is to solve the problems through dialogue," Taleban spokesman Muhamad Naeem told the Al Jazeera broadcaster ahead of yesterday's talks. "The other side must have a true and sincere will to end the problems."
Talks between the government and the Taleban side led by Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar began with Quranic recitations, Naeem tweeted yesterday. "As we pursue our greater goals, we have to go beyond the details," Baradar said in his opening remarks. For his part, Abdullah said: "We must denounce forcing our views upon each other and the people through unpeaceful means."
A key crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan partially reopened yesterday, days after the Taleban took control of the Afghan side of the border. A Pakistani border official, who did not want to be named, said small groups were being allowed into Chaman in Pakistan, while hundreds were heading into Spin Boldak in Afghanistan.
Pakistani Noor Ali, who had been visiting Kabul, said it took him two attempts to reach the border in recent days because of fighting in Kandahar province. "I was scared, but the Taleban did not create any problems, they checked my documents and allowed me to go through," he told AFP after arriving in the nearby city of Quetta. An AFP journalist witnessed people crossing in both directions.
The Taleban have also tightened their grip on the north, with clashes continuing yesterday in the stronghold of warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum that borders Turkmenistan. Also yesterday, the French government flew out around 100 of its citizens and Afghans working for the embassy from the capital, as security deteriorated, a French diplomatic source said. Several other countries including India, China, Germany and Canada have flown out their citizens or told them to leave in recent days. There have been weeks of intensifying fighting across Afghanistan, with the Taleban pressing multiple offensives and overrunning dozens of districts.
As fighting raged over large swathes of Afghanistan, a war of words was also heating up between Kabul and Islamabad, after the Afghan vice president accused the Pakistani military of providing "close air support to Taleban in certain areas". Pakistan strongly denied the claim, with its foreign ministry saying the country "took necessary measures within its territory to safeguard our own troops and population".
Islamabad had touted a conference of regional leaders to address the spiraling violence. Instead it announced it would delay the summit until after the Eid al-Adha feast, due to start next week at the end of the annual hajj pilgrimage, clearing the way for the Doha gathering. Afghanistan's southern border has long been a flashpoint in relations with its eastern neighbor. Foreign troops have been in Afghanistan for nearly two decades following the US-led invasion launched in the aftermath of the Sept 11, 2001 attacks. With their departure, fears have growing that Afghan forces will be overwhelmed without the vital air support they provide. - AFP