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Karzai to visit Qatar to discuss peace with Taliban

UmarJustice

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Afghan President Hamid Karzai will travel to Qatar within days to discuss peace negotiations with the Taliban, the Afghan Foreign Ministry said on Sunday, as efforts intensify to find a negotiated solution to the twelve year war.

Karzai's trip to Qatar would represent for the first time that Afghan president has discussed the Taliban peace process in Qatar. The tour also comes after years of stalled discussions with the United States, Pakistan and the Taliban.

The announcement was made only hours after another thorny issue in the US-Afghan relationship - the transfer to Afghan control of the last group of prisoners at the Bagram military complex held by US forces - appeared to be resolved. The Pentagon announced on Saturday that a deal had been clinched.

Karzai's Qatar trip was announced by Foreign Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai.

"President Karzai will discuss the peace process and the opening of a (Taliban) office for the purposes of conducting negotiations with Afghanistan," he said.

Karzai was expected to travel to Qatar within a week, a senior Afghan official speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters.

The announcement comes several weeks after Karzai delivered a fiery speech during the first visit to Afghanistan by new US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, in which he accused Washington of holding peace talks with the Taliban in Qatar without him.

Karzai also accused the Taliban of colluding with America to keep foreign troops in the country, marking a fresh low point in the relationship between the Afghan president and his most powerful backer.

Mosazai confirmed the agreement reached on the transfer of detainees held at the military detention facility at Bagram in Parwan province north of Kabul.

The issue of detainees at Bagram had become another stress point in Karzai's relations with Washington. A ceremony formally transferring the last prisoners to Afghan custody collapsed two weeks ago after Karzai rejected part of the deal.

American forces control an area of the prison adjacent to the Bagram military complex, which holds several dozen Taliban fighters considered by the United States to pose the most severe threat.

Washington is concerned the Afghans may release some of these men when control of the prison is handed over.

That concern was reinforced during Karzai's outburst this month, in which he said the United States had been dragging its heels on prisoner transfers and said he would release those detainees that were "innocent".

Under the terms of agreement, all Afghans detained by forces of the US-led coalition would now have to be handed over to Afghan control within 96 hours of capture, Mosazai said. Any decision to release them after that would be made only by the Afghan government.

The United States last year agreed to hand over responsibility for most of the more than 3,000 detainees at the prison to Afghanistan and held a transfer ceremony in September.

Karzai to visit Qatar to discuss peace with Taliban | The Nation
 
Why the hell is Qatar trying to play champion with salafacist and talibanist movements all around the Muslim world?
 
Stalemate to continue: Taliban rule out talks with Karzai during Qatar visit
The Afghan Taliban on Sunday ruled out the possibility of holding negotiations with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during his upcoming visit to Qatar, where he will discuss peace process with the host leaders.

The move comes within hours of an Afghan foreign ministry announcement that President Karzai would travel to Qatar soon to discuss the reconciliation process in Afghanistan and bilateral matters with the leadership of the Gulf state.

Karzai, according to foreign ministry’s spokesman Janan Mosazai, will hold talks on two main issues including establishment of Taliban liaison office in Qatar and the improvement of bilateral ties between the two countries.

The officials say that the leadership of Afghan High Peace Council will also accompany the Afghan president on the visit, indicating that the peace process will be high on the agenda.

However, the president’s spokesperson, Aimal Faizi, told the media in Kabul that it has not yet been decided whether Karzai will meet with Taliban representatives during his stay.

For their part, the Taliban were quick to reject any possibility of such talks with the president or any other member of his official delegation. “There is no plan of Taliban negotiators to meet Karzai,” the Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said on Sunday.

“There is no change in our policy of not holding talks with the Afghan government,” Mujahid told The Express Tribune via phone from Afghanistan when his comments were sought about the Afghan officials indicating any such contact in Qatar.

Nearly 25 Taliban representatives are now living in Qatar; some of them had held a series of ‘exploratory talks’ with the United States (US), until the Taliban suspended the process early last year.

They are hopeful of recognition of their political office in Qatar as it will provide them an address and a place to interact with the world community.

An Afghan official in Pakistan said President Karzai is likely to give his approval to the opening of the office in his talks with the Qatari leaders.

Requesting not to be identified, the official told The Express Tribune that the Afghan president will seek cooperation from the Qatari authorities to encourage Taliban for direct talks with his government. It is strongly believed that the Qatari government could play an important role in establishing contacts between Taliban and the Karzai government.

The Taliban spokesman, however, insisted that talks with the Karzai government are useless as it “has no powers and cannot take decisions independently.”

The Taliban political office is receiving international support as the pullout of Nato troops from the region is fast approaching.

In January, US President Barack Obama endorsed the opening of a Taliban office in a third-party country to facilitate reconciliation talks when he received President Karzai in Washington.

Last month, British Prime Minister, David Cameron and President Asif Ali Zardari backed the Taliban political office at a trilateral summit along with President Karzai in London.

Stalemate to continue: Taliban rule out talks with Karzai during Qatar visit – The Express Tribune
 
I don't think he will be lasting too much longer. I think Pakistan will look forward to the dismissal of this puppet.

Why the hell is Qatar trying to play champion with salafacist and talibanist movements all around the Muslim world?

Getting a bit big for their boots. But in Afghan context if they can help then let's see what they can help pull off
 
UmarJustice said:
Karzai also accused the Taliban of colluding with America to keep foreign troops in the country
Karzai has always had a very rich sense of humour. This is his most recent attempt to project himself as something other than a puppet.
 
Karzai has always had a very rich sense of humour. This is his most recent attempt to project himself as something other than a puppet.

He has no other option than to talk to Taliban other wise the day USA runs away Taliban will make sure they destroy every soldier in ANA and also cartoons in government
 
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