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Posted On: 21 April 2013 03:58 pm
Updated On: 12 November 2020 02:12 pm

Taliban in Qatar see no early US peace talks

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Taliban leaders living in Qatar have held no Afghanistan peace talks with US officials in the Gulf state for more than a year and see no prospect of any soon, Taliban sources say. A team of envoys from the Islamist insurgent group flew to Qatar in early 2012 to open talks with the US government, which has laid a greater emphasis on negotiations before a handover of security to Afghan forces in 2014. Among the most prominent members of the delegation in Doha is Tayeb Agha, the former chief of staff to the Taliban's reclusive leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar. But more than a year later, the negotiations held in March 2012 have not been followed by further meetings, Taliban sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. Many of the Taliban leaders living in Qatar now appear to spend their time pursuing private family activities. Many can be seen at the shopping malls of the gas-rich Gulf Arab state, pushing trolleys loaded with merchandise and with their children in tow. "There has been no contact from the US with us at all this year," said a Taliban source under condition of anonymity. No date had been set to restart the talks, he said, declining to give any further details. Talks among the United States, Pakistan and the Taliban about a possible Afghan settlement have made scant progress in the past few years. The Taliban suspended the talks in March 2012, saying Washington was giving mixed signals on the nascent Afghan reconciliation process. "Taliban had asked for the exchange of prisoners and recognition as a group, but as far as I know there have been no more talks," said Mohammed Himat, counselor at the Afghan embassy in Doha, told Reuters. The talks in Doha between the Taliban and the United States in 2012 had taken place at a U.S. military facility, he said. Afghan officials have not held formal talks with the militants, who were toppled by U.S.-led forces in 2001 in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States but have proven resilient after more than a decade of war. The Kabul government has said it wants to start talks with the Taliban to end the conflict befroe the planned departure of most foreign combat troops by the end of 2014. Last month, Afghan President Hamid Karzai flew to Doha and held talks with the emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, in an effort to speed up the opening of a Taliban representative office in Qatar where further talks could be held. Karzai had initially resisted Western plans to grant the Taliban an office in Qatar, concerned that it would give the movement political legitimacy and reduce his control over the direction of any future talks. But he endorsed the proposal in late 2011 under pressure from his allies. Other countries who had also offered to host the office were Turkey and Saudi Arabia, Himat added. However, an Afghan government official familiar with the peace talks said Saudi Arabia was not an ideal option as it was seen as having strong ties with Pakistan. Afghan officials have long accused Pakistan of backing the Taliban or tolerating the movement's leaders presence on its territory in the hope of using the force as proxy to influence events in Afghanistan. Nasrullah Stanekzai, an advisor to Karzai in legal affairs, told Reuters the opening of a Doha office for the Taliban would help Afghanistan engage in direct peace talks with insurgents and limit Pakistan's influence on the process. With with no clear timeline of when peace talks will resume, the Taliban have continued their suicide attacks. Earlier this month, nine Taliban suicide bombers killed themselves and 44 others in an attack on a courtroom in western Afghanistan where 10 of their comrades were on trial, the biggest death toll in a single attack since 2011. Apart from Agha, the Taliban team includes Mualavi Shahabadin Delawar, a former Taliban ambassador to Saudi Arabia; Sohail Shaheen, a former Taliban ambassador to Pakistan, Sher Mohammad Stanekzai, a former Taliban minister of public health, Qari Deen Mohammad, from northern Tajikistan province and former Taliban minister of planning, Hafez Sayed Rahman from Laghman province and the Taliban's envoy to Abu Dhabi, diplomats said. Qatari authorities were unavailable to confirm whether these Taliban members were living in Doha. Diplomats have said the authorities have banned them from speaking to the media. Some can now be spotted at malls dressed in Gulf Arab robes, pushing shopping trolleys and playing with their children. "They are inactive here in Doha and are monitored very closely by the authorities, but they are free to roam around the country and travel," Himat said. Source: Arabian Business