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Afghan Opp admits dialogue with Taliban
Foreign Desk Report
KABUL (Afghanistan)—An opposition group says its leaders, including a
former president, have been meeting with the Taliban and other
anti-government groups in hopes of negotiating an end to rising violence
in Afghanistan. The contacts have taken place between leaders of the
opposition National Front and “high level” militant leaders during the
last few months, party spokesman Sayyid Agha Hussain Fazel Sancharaki
said in an interview Sunday.
He said among those at the meetings were former President Burhanuddin
Rabbani, now a member of parliament, and Mohammad Qasim Fahim, who is
President Hamid Karzai’s security adviser and a powerful northern
strongman. Rabbani said Afghanistan’s six-year war must be solved
through talks, echoing a view held by many in the country.
“There’s no doubt that some inside the Taliban are not willing to
negotiate, but there are some Taliban who are interested in solving
problems through talks,” Rabbani, Afghanistan’s president from 1992-96,
told The Associated Press in an interview. “We in the National Front and
I myself believe the solution for the political process in Afghanistan
will happen through negotiations,” he said.
Support for talks to end the increasingly bloody Afghan conflict have
gained steam over the last year. President Hamid Karzai said for the
first time in April 2007 that he had met with Taliban militants in
attempts to negotiate peace. Rabbani said opposition leaders will soon
discuss and possibly select a formal negotiating team and that Taliban
fighters, in their talks with Karzai, have also proposed sending a
formal team for talks with the government. The behind-the-scenes
maneuverings come just as the United States is pouring more troops into
the country. Some 32,000 U.S. forces are in Afghanistan, the most since
the 2001 invasion to oust the Taliban for hosting al-Qaida leader Osama
bin Laden. Two NATO soldiers died and two others were wounded Wednesday
in an explosion in southern Afghanistan, the military alliance said,
while a clash in the same region left five Taliban militants and a
policeman dead.
It did not disclose the nationalities of the casualties or the exact
location of the blast. The wounded were evacuated to a military base for
treatment, NATO said in a statement. In Zabul province, militants
ambushed a police convoy, killing an officer, said Gen. Abdul Raziq
Khan, a provincial police official. In ensuing firefight, five militants
were also killed, Raziq said. Authorities recovered their bodies
alongside their weapons.
Separately, militants abducted and beheaded two Afghan men working at a
U.S. military base in the eastern Kunar province, provincial police
Chief Abdul Jalal Jalal said.
The two men were abducted Monday after they left the base in Korangal
Valley, the scene of fierce clashes between U.S. troops and insurgents
in the past few years. Their bodies were discovered Tuesday, Jalal said.
Militants regularly target people working for U.S. and other foreign
forces. Despite the violence and heightened military posture, U.S.
ambassador William Wood has said the U.S. supports talks with militants
who will lay down arms and recognize the Afghan constitution. The U.S.
does not support talks with al-Qaida fighters.
Across the border in Pakistan, where militant violence has spiked over
the last year, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani late last month offered
talks to militants ready to renounce violence there. Negotiations will
ultimately be the only way to end the Afghan conflict, said Wadir Safi,
a professor of public and international law at Kabul University.
“Negotiations,” he said. “Find the address of all of the Taliban, find
out what they want. They will have their own suggestions, and if it’s
not anti-civilization, you can come to terms with them instead of
spending money on military budgets.” Karzai, in a news conference this
month, said the National Front efforts are good for the country. He said
many rebels are Afghans who need to be brought back into society. For
months, Karzai has trumpeted reconciliation, even offering to meet with
Taliban leader Mullah Omar.
But the National Front says Karzai has not followed up his words with
action. He needs to put a formal negotiations process in place involving
all parties, Rabbani said. “I told Karzai that when a person starts
something he should complete it. On the issue of the negotiations it is
not right to take one step forward and then one step back,” he said.
“This work should be continued in a very organized way.” Rabbani and
Sancharaki declined to say who the National Front has met with.
Sancharaki said their militant interlocutors were “important people.”
The Taliban, through spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid, denied there had been
any contact. “If they are claiming they have contact with somebody, we
don’t know who,” he said.
Thousands of former members of the hard-line Taliban regime, including a
sprinkling of former senior commanders and officials, have made peace
with the government through its national reconciliation commission. But
Safi, the university professor, said that because the National Front
does not represent the government, its negotiations are “nonsense.” |