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Exclusive: Taliban rejects Karzai's offer

By Tahir Ali
October 01, 2010 11:46 IST
Taliban leader Mullah Omar's spokesman rejects Afghan President Hamid Karzai's attempts for talks with the Taliban in an exchange with Rediff.com contributor Tahir Ali.

Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai may have appointed a high-level peace council to hold talks with the Taliban, but the latter seems to be in no mood to indulge him.

Zabiullah Mujahid, Taliban leader Mullah Omar's spokesperson, in an e-mail exchange with Rediff.com, said the Afghan Taliban would never fall into a trap that aims to prolong the United States-led International Security Force's stay in Afghanistan.

On Tuesday Karzai announced the appointment of a high-level peace council for holding talks with the Taliban.

The Afghan president's office later announced a list of 68 people who would broker a possible peace deal with warring militants and other anti-government factions.

Council members include former president Burhanuddin Rabbani, commander Abdul Rab Rasool Sayaf and Haji Mohammad Mohaqiq, who were part of the resistance against the Taliban regime (1996 to 2001) and helped the US topple the Mullah Omar-led Taliban government in 2001.

In his e-mail Zabiullah Mujahid said, "Islami Amarat (the Pakistan Taliban) itself is striving for peace in Afghanistan. The Taliban considers peace as a basic human right, but the Taliban has objections over this offer, which is a ploy to deviate the world's attention from Afghanistan where the American-led foreign forces have almost lost their war against the mujahideen."

The Afghan Taliban, while rejecting Karzai's announcement of a Shura (council) for talks, has announced its ten-point agenda:

Tahir Ali in Islamabad

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