ISLAMABAD: Former Afghan ambassador in Islamabad Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef says Pakistan has ‘increased pressure’ on the Taliban to join the reconciliation process but the insurgents will not accept the pressure.
“Pakistan has increased pressure on the Taliban but they will not accept what Pakistan wants them to do. Pakistan has detained some senior Taliban leaders at a time when efforts are underway in the region to encourage the Taliban to come to the negotiating table,” Zaeef told Daily Times by the phone.
Pakistan is now committed to supporting the Afghan-led and Afghan-owned peace and reconciliation under Afghanistan – Pakistan Action Plan for Peace and Solidarity (APAPPS), which is a joint action plan for cooperation in key areas of counter-terrorism and for reduction of violence and promotion of peace and reconciliation, involving repatriation of refugees and joint economic development.
Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi during his visit to Kabul on April 6 welcomed President Ashraf Ghani’s peace and reconciliation offer to the Taliban and both leaders called on them to respond positively to the peace offer and join the peace process without further delay.
“Taliban do not want any deal through any country, including Pakistan and Iran, but they want to solve the problems with the US without involvement of others,” Zaeef said.
Zaeef, who was the Afghan ambassador during Taliban government in Kabul, was arrested in Pakistan in 2002 and handed over to the United States months after American military toppled the Taliban government.
The United States had detained Zaeef at the Guantanamo Bay for some years, and finally set him free in 2005. He was put on the list of designated terrorists until 2010 and later he was excluded from it.
To a question why the Afghan Taliban were invited to peace negotiations by Kabul government, Zaeef said that the Taliban had not accepted the offer to join the political system as yet.
“So far, the Taliban consider the Kabul government an unconstitutional government. Secondly, the Taliban want to liberate Afghanistan from clutches of occupation forces. They want to introduce Islamic government in Afghanistan,” the former Taliban envoy said.
“I believe the Kabul government is not willing to understand objectives of the Taliban. Some Taliban leaders believe there is a conspiracy theory hidden behind recognition of the Taliban as a political power and, therefore, they do not accept this offer,” he said when asked about President Ghani’s offer to recognise them as a political party.
Ghani in his speech at the Kabul Process meeting on February 28 had offered the Taliban to open office in Afghanistan.
Responding to another question, Zaeef said that Pakistan was keen to see the Afghan Taliban joining the political system because Pakistan was facing serious allegations.
He categorically stated that the Taliban would not accept the demands of any country unless the foreign forces quit Afghanistan. He said that the United States was still engaged in creating problems for the Taliban and the people of Afghanistan and the region in several different ways. He said that the regional situation had deteriorated with the US invasion of Afghanistan.
Zaeef said the US should abandon stubbornness and give the Afghan war-affected stakeholders in Afghanistan an opportunity to resolve the issue on their own. “Washington should avoid making it an issue of pride and refrain from bringing further instability to the region in general and Afghanistan in particular, he said.
Published in Daily Times, April 9th 2018.
Islamabad : Kaspersky experts have uncovered a new phishing scam targeting businesses that promote their…
Lahore – 26 December 2024: As the fastest-growing smartphone brand in the world, realme has…
Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday said the country’s fundamental agenda of development and…
Survivors and families of victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami 20 years ago visited mass…
The military court has sentenced 60 more individuals, including Hassan Khan Niazi, the nephew…
One time, I was sitting with a few senior bureaucrats, and they were continuously blaming…
Leave a Comment