City
Epaper

After US-Taliban peace deal, more turmoil in Afghanistan

By IANS | Updated: March 4, 2020 17:26 IST

Since the US and Taliban inked their peace deal, Afghanistan has been fast heading towards greater instability and political turmoil.

Open in App

New Delhi/Kabul, March 4 Since the US and Taliban inked their peace deal, Afghanistan has been fast heading towards greater instability and political turmoil.

While the violence has resumed at the same level as it was before February 21, when the week-long 'reduction in violence' pact between the US and Taliban came into effect, the Afghan government scheduled to begin its talks with the Taliban on March 10, is yet to announce its negotiating team.

Two days after the peace treaty was signed, the Afghan militant group ordered its members to launch terror attacks against the Afghanistan government. The Taliban after it got the go-ahead from its leadership, killed three people in a bomb blast on Monday and three civil on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, Taliban launched 33 attacks in 17 provinces, killing over 16 soldiers and five civil were killed amid the "reduction in violence" pact between the US and the Taliban.

As per the "peace treaty", the US and Nato allies have agreed to withdraw all troops within 14 months if the Taliban fulfills its side of the deal. Around 5,000 Taliban prisoners and 1,000 Afghan security force prisoners are to be swapped by March 10.

However, it is not clear whether the prisoners will be exchanged since Afghan President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani on Sunday rejected Taliban's demand for the release of the detainees within ten days. Ghani has taken a stand that any precondition for the intra-Afghan talks is unacceptable to him.

His posturing stands in contrast to Abdullah Abdullah, the self-declared president of Afghanistan, who disputed the results of the elections which were held last year and re-elected Ashraf Ghani. Abdullah, sources told , has appointed Hizb-e-Islami chief Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, the governor of Badkhshan province bordering China and Pakistan.

Hekmatyar, who served as Afghan prime minister twice, is an Islamist warlord accused of committing numerous atrocities. His group is the second largest militant outfit in Afghanistan.

Ghani and Abdullah also disagree over the formation of a negotiating team with the former keen on not having more than eight members. Abdullah has accused Ghani of monopolising the peace process. Interestingly, Abdullah has been accused of receiving funds from Pakistani agencies.

Meanwhile, the political chief of the Afghan Taliban, Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai in a rare interview to media said that the militant group has got invite from several countries in Asia and Europe to hold intra-Afghan dialogue. He said the group was yet to decide the venue, but would certainly hold one round of talks in Pakistan.

Since the beginning of the talks, Pakistan had been proposing that the eastern and southern Afghanistan, already in control of Taliban, be handed over to them officially.

On Tuesday even as US President Donald Trump said that he has had a good phone conversation with Taliban chief Mullah Biradar, the spokesperson for the US forces in Afghanistan on Wednesday declared that the US will defend its allies in the country, indicating that it still stands by Ashraf Ghani government.

"As we have demonstrated, we will defend our partners when required," spokesman for US Forces in Afghanistan, Col. Sonny Leggett said.

( With inputs from IANS )

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessWai Wai Taps India's K-Culture Boom With Dynamite Korean Kimchi Launch

NationalGujarat: 4 Members of Family Killed After Fire Breaks Out in Godhra

BusinessOPPI Annual Summit 2025 Highlights the 'Power of Partnership' in Driving India's Pharma Transformation

InternationalFaridabad bomb plot and South India ricin conspiracy expose ISI's two-front destabilisation plan

Technology1 in 5 iPhones made globally in FY25 came out of India amid record domestic sales

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan: IHC judges blocked from challenging 27th Amendment, told to approach new FCC

InternationalBangladesh: Awami League alleges ‘state-sponsored murders’ inside prisons

InternationalMamdani says White House meet with Trump to focus on affordability crisis

InternationalPM Modi departs for South Africa to attend 20th G20 Leaders’ Summit

InternationalIndia-Israel FTA will be a stepping stone to our shared prosperity: Goyal