Kabul:The Taliban on Saturday rejected an Afghan government negotiation team set up to hold talks with the insurgent group in a bid to end the country's 18-year-old conflict.
After months of delays, the government on Friday announced a 21-member team -- including five women -- to take part in the upcoming talks, a crucial step in bringing the warring parties to the table and getting a floundering, US-led peace process back on track.
But the Taliban in a statement said the government had failed to put forward an inclusive team.
"We shall only sit for talks with a negotiation team that conforms with our agreements and is constituted following the laid out principles," the statement said.
"To reach true and lasting peace, the aforementioned team must be agreed upon by all effective Afghan sides," it said, adding that the majority of those involved in the intra-Afghan talks had rejected the team, without specifying which parties.
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Under a deal signed by the US and the Taliban last month, the insurgents agreed to resume talks with the Afghan government and discuss a possible ceasefire.