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Khalilzad, US General meet Taliban in Qatar

Based on the US-Taliban peace agreement, 5,000 prisoners of the group should be released by the Afghan government, and 1,000 prisoners should be released by the Taliban, to pave the way for intra-Afghan negotiations.

Khalilzad, US General meet Taliban in Qatar
Khalilzad, US General meet Taliban in Qatar
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Published : Apr 14, 2020, 12:49 PM IST

Kabul: American peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and General Austin S. Miller, the commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan, met a Taliban delegation led by the deputy leader of the group Mullah Baradar in Qatar and discussed the agreement inked by the tw sides for peace in Afghanistan.

The meeting was announced on Monday by the Taliban on Twitter, and Khalilzad's trip to Qatar was confirmed by a statement from the US State Department, reports TOLO News.

"They talked about complete implementation of the agreement as well as delay in the release of the prisoners. Violations of the agreement and other issues and ways of their solutions were also discussed," said Suhail Shaheen, a Taliban spokesman in Qatar.

A source familiar with the talks told TOLO News that Gen. Miller while meeting with Taliban in Qatar "focused on the need to reduce violence and creating the conditions for intra-Afghan negotiations".

"He underscored that all sides should capitalize on the opportunity for peace."

Based on the US-Taliban peace agreement, 5,000 prisoners of the group should be released by the Afghan government, and 1,000 prisoners should be released by the Taliban, to pave the way for intra-Afghan negotiations.

Recently, Zabihullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, responded to the first group of prisoners released by the Afghan government, calling the freed detainees "unidentified."

Also Read: N Korea fires suspected cruise missiles

The Afghan government has so far released 361 Taliban prisoners from Bagram prison, says Javid Faisal, a spokesman for the Office of the National Security Council.

As per President Ghani's decree, said Faisal, "releases will continue across other prisons to free a total of 1,500 as part of our efforts to advance peace and fight COVID-19".

On Sunday, the Taliban released 20 government prisoners, the group tweeted.

Khalilzad in a tweet welcomed the prisoner releases by both the Afghan government and Taliban.

He says that both sides should "accelerate efforts" to meet targets of the US-Taliban agreement because "potential for COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons poses a real threat".

Kabul: American peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and General Austin S. Miller, the commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan, met a Taliban delegation led by the deputy leader of the group Mullah Baradar in Qatar and discussed the agreement inked by the tw sides for peace in Afghanistan.

The meeting was announced on Monday by the Taliban on Twitter, and Khalilzad's trip to Qatar was confirmed by a statement from the US State Department, reports TOLO News.

"They talked about complete implementation of the agreement as well as delay in the release of the prisoners. Violations of the agreement and other issues and ways of their solutions were also discussed," said Suhail Shaheen, a Taliban spokesman in Qatar.

A source familiar with the talks told TOLO News that Gen. Miller while meeting with Taliban in Qatar "focused on the need to reduce violence and creating the conditions for intra-Afghan negotiations".

"He underscored that all sides should capitalize on the opportunity for peace."

Based on the US-Taliban peace agreement, 5,000 prisoners of the group should be released by the Afghan government, and 1,000 prisoners should be released by the Taliban, to pave the way for intra-Afghan negotiations.

Recently, Zabihullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, responded to the first group of prisoners released by the Afghan government, calling the freed detainees "unidentified."

Also Read: N Korea fires suspected cruise missiles

The Afghan government has so far released 361 Taliban prisoners from Bagram prison, says Javid Faisal, a spokesman for the Office of the National Security Council.

As per President Ghani's decree, said Faisal, "releases will continue across other prisons to free a total of 1,500 as part of our efforts to advance peace and fight COVID-19".

On Sunday, the Taliban released 20 government prisoners, the group tweeted.

Khalilzad in a tweet welcomed the prisoner releases by both the Afghan government and Taliban.

He says that both sides should "accelerate efforts" to meet targets of the US-Taliban agreement because "potential for COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons poses a real threat".

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