Thursday, 18 September 2014

Afghan prosecution seeks enhanced punishment for Pakistani reporter










Afghan prosecution has sought enhanced punishment for a Pakistani TV reporter, who was awarded four years in prison in July on charges of travelling to the neighbouring country without documents, his lawyer says.

Faizullah Khan, a reporter for ARY News, was detained by Afghan security officials in the eastern Nangarhar province in April this year. Some reports had earlier suggested Faizullah was on assignment to interview Taliban leaders as part of his professional duties.

The Afghan spy agency, National Directorate of Security (NDS), had initially charged him of spying. However, the judge did not accept the NDS plea and convicted him for travelling to Afghanistan without documents, and for “positively projecting the Taliban.”

Later an intelligence court convicted Khan for illegal entry and “positive projection of the militants.”

Khan’s lawyer had challenged his conviction in a high court in eastern Nangarhar province.

The Afghan High Court had a brief hearing of the appeal on September 16, sources close the legal proceedings said. Faizullah Khan was also produced in the court.  

An Afghan prosecutor read out a “charge-sheet” against Faizullah Khan and told the High Court that the intelligence court has convicted the Pakistani reporter only on one charge and that a verdict has yet to be given on other charges.

He also claimed that the “reporter was sent to Afghanistan by the government institutions from Karachi.”

Defence lawyer Hameedullah rejected the charges against his client Faizullah Khan. He said Khan is a professional journalist and he was unaware as to whom he will interview as those who he had interviewed in Peshawar had organized his interviews in the border areas.

“It was not Faizullah Khan’s choice to conduct interviews in the border areas but all were fixed by others,” the defence lawyer further argued.

He said the Pakistani reporter should be acquitted as he had challenged the militants for their violent approach and that their conduct is against the true spirit of Islam.

The Afghan court later adjourned the hearing without giving any date.

In Islamabad the Foreign Office spokesperson the Foreign Ministry is pursuing the case.

“The lawyer and our concerned officials are proceedings with care. We are very much on this case,” spokesperson Tasnim Aslam said at her weekly briefing.

“We have also requested our embassy (in Kabul) and the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs for further meetings to help this case proceeds smoothly,” she said.

She also said the Foreign Ministry has hired a lawyer to take up the appeal in the High Court. “There will be one hearing in which a decision to his appeal will be given.”

The Pakistani consulate in Jalalabad, the capital of the Nangarhar province in Afghanistan, has been involved in the legal help of the journalist.

International and Pakistani media groups had condemned the Afghan court’s verdict and had demanded his immediate release.

Reporters Without Borders had termed it an “utterly disproportionate sentence” and asked for it “to be quashed on appeal.”

“The organisation questions the court’s motives for imposing such a heavy sentence. Was it a message to foreign reporters entering Afghanistan without proper travel documents, or was it a warning to foreign reporters investigating subjects regarded as ‘sensitive’?,” the organization had stated in a statement.

== 

Wednesday, 27 August 2014

Kabul issues Afghan passports to ex-Gitmo Taliban prisoners’ families











Afghan government has issued dozens of passports to families of five senior Afghan Taliban leaders, freed from the U.S. prison Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in May this year, and facilitated them to join them in Qatar, Taliban and Afghan officials privy to the transfer of the families, say.

The Taliban leaders says that the Afghan government had issued 65 Afghan passports to the family members of the Taliban this month that was seen as a move to win some sympathy of the Taliban, who had been unwilling to talk to Karzai regime.

“The Afghan President’s office had facilitated transfer of the family members of the Taliban leaders to Qatar and the government had issued Afghan passports to all,” a Taliban leader said. He requested not to be identified as he is not authorized to speak to the media on the record.

Four families of the Taliban leaders were flown to Dubai from Kabul international airport under tight security this month while the family of former Interior Minister Maulvi Khairullah Khairkhwa had travelled from Islamabad’s Benazir Bhutto International airport, he said. The Khairkhwa family was also issued Afghan passports.

The United States had freed the Taliban detainees in exchange for the release of the only American soldier, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, held prisoner in Afghanistan for nearly five years. Bergdahl had been in the custody of the Haqqani Network the group’s fighters had handed him over to the US special forces somewhere in Khost.

Taliban supreme leader Mullah Omar had described the release of ‘the detainees as a ‘great victory, who had been incarcerated for the last 13 years in the infamous Guantanamo detention center.

“The President office had assigned the senior member of the High Peace Council, Masoom Stanakzai, to quickly arrange all required documents and facilitate their journey to the UAE,” an Afghan official said. The Taliban families later proceeded to Qatar from Dubai. Stanakzai, a close relative of an UAE-based Taliban leader, had been previously been involved in contacts with the Taliban.

The official, who did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue, said that an Afghan security official had been deployed at the airport at the departure of the Taliban family members and they had been given full protocol at the airport.


Those who had been freed include:Khairullah Khairkhwa, the Taliban interior minister, Abdul Haq Wasiq, the Taliban deputy minister of intelligence, Mullah Norullah Nori, a senior Taliban commander in the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, Mohammed Nabi, chief of security for the Taliban, and Mohammad Fazal Akhund, the Taliban defence minister.

Diplomatic sources in Islamabad says that the Afghan embassy in Islamabad has also issued passports to some Taliban leaders, who have travelled to Qatar and UAE. “The embassy had previously been reluctant to issue passports to the Taliban leaders but now they issue passports,” they sources said.
 
Brothers of Taliban’s top negotiators still in Pakistan’s custody:

Afghan Taliban say Pakistani authorities have not yet released two brothers of the Taliban top negotiator in Qatar, Tayyeb Agha, who had been detained in Karachi and Quetta in April, Taliban and Agha’s family sources say.

Pakistan had neither officially confirmed nor explained as to why Younas Agha and Tahir Agha had been taken into custody from Karachi and Quetta. The Taliban had not publicly spoken on the issue since the arrests.

The Taliban sources say that other family members of Tayyeb Agha, including his father, who had been lived for years in Pakistan, have now shifted to Kandahar fearing arrests in Pakistan.

Family members of Tayyeb Agha who had left Pakistan after the arrest of his two brother and had moved to Afghanistan. They have now traveled to Qatar, sources say.

==

Friday, 25 July 2014

Mullah Omar says Taliban winning war in Afghanistan



Afghan Taliban supreme leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar, on Friday issued his traditional “Eid” message, asking his fighters to protect Afghanistan’s borders. He said Taliban are winning and foreigners loosing war in Afghanistan.

“I call on all Mujahideen in the frontier areas to protect their borders and maintain good relations with neighboring countries on the basis of mutual respect,” said Omar, whose whereabouts are unknown since the U.S. military has dislodged the Taliban government in late 2001.

He assured the world and the neighbors that the Taliban struggle is aimed only at forming an “independent Islamic regime and obtaining independence of our country.”

“We are not intending to interfere in the (internal) affairs of the region and the countries of the world, nor do we want to harm them. Similarly, we don’t tolerate their role to harm us and urge them to have reciprocal stance.”

Omar said Taliban are winning their war against foreign forces and said Taliban will continue fighting until a single foreign soldier stays in Afghanistan.

“We believe the war in Afghanistan will come to an end when all foreign invaders pull out of Afghanistan and a holy Islamic and independent regime prevails here,” he said in the message posted on the Taliban website.

The Taliban chief said the presence of limited number of troops under whatever title it may be will mean continuation of occupation and the war. “This is because none can tolerate invading forces in one’s soil.”

He also opposed the signing of the controversial security agreement with the United States that allows a longer stay of few thousands American troops beyond this year.

“We would like to tell those who are contemplating to sign a security treaty with the invaders to desist from acts which add to prolongation of the invasion and to causes of the war. The presence of the invaders in our country is not in the interest of anyone. The continuation of war aggravates security of the region and the country,” the Taliban leader said. 

He claimed that the Taliban are winning the war in Afghanistan and the “blanket of invasion has rolled back from vast areas.”

“Vital centers of the enemy have come under successful attacks in cities.  Writ and administration of the Islamic Emirate has become stronger comparatively,” he further claimed.

The Taliban leader highlighted the political role of his group and said the Taliban have gained a political facade at world’s and internal levels through their office in Qatar.

“Many entities that used to oppose us now have come around to accept the Islamic Emirate as a reality.”

He recalled that the recent exchange of the detainees with the U.S. as a result of the efforts of the representatives of the Political Office of the Taliban was a spectacular achievement.

The Taliban freed a U.S. soldier for five senior leader released from the infamous American detention center at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

Omar again rejected what he called the fake election process that he said has plunged the Kabul Administration and Western democracy into disrepute.

“In fact, the invaders and their internal allies wanted through the said process, to show to the Afghans that a (tangible) change has taken place. But the Afghans had realized their ambitions from the beginning. That is why majority of the people boycotted the process.”

The Taliban leader claimed all now believe that election and the ballots of the people were mere slogans to deceive the people; sow racial, geographical and lingual and other hatred among the people.

“We all now see that the American game under the name of elections proved, as in the past, to be selections. The power is in the hands of the invaders. What they say is compulsory on their internal allies to obey without taking into account interests of their country and people.”

He urged the American and European governments, who have troops in Afghanistan or are intending to maintain political influence or military bases in Afghanistan, to let the Afghans establish an independent Islamic government on the basis of their religious and national aspirations.

“If you want to deprive them of their right to form a government, it will be not only a tyranny and violation of human norms but also will result in the self-same consequences that you have seen in the past thirteen years,” he said.
== 


Thursday, 17 July 2014

Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of Kabul airport attack







Shortly after Pakistan strongly condemned series of recent terrorist attacks in Afghanistan, senior Afghan officials claimed Pakistan’s security agencies were behind the Thursday’s attack on the Kabul international airport.

Afghan Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack and the group’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said four Taliban took part in what he called “martyrdom attacks” as part of their spring offensive codenamed “Khyber.”

Mujahid also released to the media names of four attackers who belonged to different parts of Afghanistan. He claimed the attackers inflicted “heavy losses on the enemy.”

The Afghan authorities however denied any casualties and losses to the aircraft and other infrastructure. The Afghan security forces killed all four Taliban militants during a five-hour gun battle.

The Afghan Interior Ministry however blamed Pakistan’s main intelligence agency ISI besides the militant groups. The Interior Ministry spokesman Siddiq Siddiqi told a news conference in Kabul that attacks on Kabul airport have been increased after the June 8 assault on the Karachi international airport.

“Our interpretation is that after Karachi attack, certain circles, especially Haqani, Taliban and ISI, trie to attack our airport. After attack on Karachi airport international flights postponed there, they fixed evil goal that same attack should be taken place on Kabul airport to stop international flights that we are witness of them,” Siddiqi said, according to an Afghan journalist who attended the presser.

The Afghan official said the Thursday’s attack was third on Kabul airport after the Karachi airport. He also claimed that the attackers were speaking Urdu language, adding “it was a revenge of the Karachi attack.”
Pakistani Taliban and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan had claimed responsibility for the deadly attack that had killed over 30 security, aviation and PIA personnel.

Deputy Interior Minister Gen. Ayub Salangi said: “Intelligence networks of neighbouring countries are behind the attack.”  Two rocket launchers, a machine gun, two Kalashnikov rifles and ammunitions were found at the scene, according to private Pajhwok news agency.

Afghan Taliban have increased attacks since they have launched their traditional annual “Spring Offensive.”
Also on Thursday the Taliban attacked a security team of President Hamid Karzai who was on its way to eastern Paktika province where a powerful car bomb killed nearly 80 persons this week. Two members of the Presidential security team were injured. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack.

In Islamabad the Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Pakistan strongly condemns the recent terrorist attacks in Afghanistan, including the one in Paktika Province, in which a large number of innocent civilians have lost their lives including children.

“No cause justifies such wanton acts of violence, especially in this holy month of Ramadan. We reiterate our condemnation of terrorism in all forms and manifestations,” Tasnim Aslam said at her weekly press briefing.
Kabul has once again directly charged Pakistan just two weeks after senior security officials of the two countries met in Rawalpindi and agreed “to build further trust, continue to talk under all circumstances and evolve a robust and effective bilateral border coordination mechanism.”

The Pakistan Army had raised the issue of “terrorist sanctuaries” in eastern Kunar and Nuristan provinces in Afghanistan and attacks on Pakistani border villages and posts from those sanctuaries with top Afghan defence and intelligence officials on July 3.

Monday, 26 May 2014

President Karzai refuses to meet President Obama at Bagram air base





Afghan Presidential palace says President Hamid Karzai has refused to meet President Barrack Obama at Bagram military base, where he had landed to meet American troops during his unscheduled visit late Sunday.

Obama left Afghanistan after spending few hours with the American troops at Bagram airbase, some 60 kilometers north of capital Kabul.

American officials had sought a meeting of President Karzai with President Obama at Bagram military base, the President palace said in Kabul.

“The U.S. embassy in Afghanistan, in a contact, had conveyed a request for a meeting with Afghan President and talks with President Obama at the Bagram military base,” the statement said.

“In response, President Hamid Karzai, said Afghan government is ready to warmly welcome the U.S. president at the Presidential Palace in accordance to Afghan traditions. However the President will not go to Bagram to meet President Obama,” the statement posted on the Presidential website said.

Karzai’s snub came just hours after the Afghan government decided to formally lodge a protest with the United States over recording of almost all phone calls in Afghanistan.

The Presidential Palace said in a separate statement that President Karzai presided over a cabinet meeting and described the phone taping by the American military as violation of Afghanistan’s sovereignty.

Afghan officials said that the U.S. used that equipment for phone taping which had been imported by the American military for anti-narcotics activities.

Karzai’s refusal to meet President Obama is continuation of his tensions with the United States following his unwilling to sigh a controversial security agreement that will allow some U.S. troops top stay beyond this year.

Despite recommendation by a traditional “Loya Jirga” or a grand assembly of tribal elders in November last year, calling upon President Karzai to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement, he had refused to ink it.

Karzai had put several condition for signing of the BSA including halt to raids on Afghan homes by the NATO troops and brining the Taliban to the negotiation table.

The U.S. had been anxious Karzai signed the agreement, however, now it has attached hopes to a new Afghan leader to sign it.

Both presidential candidates, Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, have hinted to sign the agreement if elected to power. The election runoff will be held on June 14.

President Obama however spoke with President Karzai to congratulate  him on the conduct of the first round of elections for President and Provincial Councils and to praise the constructive role played by the President and the people of Afghanistan in the elections, the Presidential palace said on Monday.

“President Obama hoped that the 2nd round of the Afghan elections would too be completed successfully,” the palace said in a separate statement.

During the telephone conversation last Sunday, the two leaders also talked about the peace process of Afghanistan.

“President Karzai informed President Obama that the swearing-in ceremony for the next President of Afghanistan will be held on 2nd August, this year and hoped that the US would also be represented at a senior level in the event.”
== 


Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Pakistani Taliban decide not to extend ceasefire: spokesman




ISLAMABAD, April 16 -- Pakistani Taliban Wednesday said they have decided not to extend ceasefire, the group's spokesman, Shahidullah Shahid said. He, however, said the dialogue process will continue.

The extended ceasefire expired on April 10.

A senior Taliban intermediary Prof. Ibrahim said the group's negotiators will encourage the TTP leadership to continue the ceasefire. He told the media that the Taliban have not stopped the dialogue process.

"The government should clarify as to what obstacles it is facing to take the dialogue process ahead," he said shortly after the Taliban announcement. He urged the government to take steps for bridging the trust gap.

The Taliban had earlier declared a month-long ceasefire on March 1st and later extended it for ten more days. The government had also suspended airstrikes against the Taliban hideouts in Waziristan tribal regions.

The Taliban spokesman accused the government of failing to make any progress on the Taliban's demands.

"The Central Council of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan has unanimously decided not to extend the ceasefire," the TTP spokesman said in a statement.

The Taliban spokesman, however, said that the dialogue process will continue with complete “sincerity and seriousness,” that could keep hopes alive for a halt in the attacks.

“The TTP will not be reluctant from to take serious steps if the government makes some progress on our demands,” he said in a detailed statement.

The spokesman said the TTP showed “complete restraint and tolerance” over the ongoing operation with the “root out” code name during the negotiations that caused widespread losses to the Taliban.

“We tried to control our colleagues from any provocation and kept our intermediary informed about the development. We have made it clear to our negotiators that the government’s actions are very harmful for the dialogue process.”

“There had neither been any progress on the Taliban demands for the release of the non-combatant prisoners nor on establishing a peace zone. The government even did not put a pause on the operations against the Taliban,” the TTP spokesman claimed.

The Taliban wanted the government returns some areas in South Waziristan tribal region for the future talks; however, the security forces had opposed the proposal.

The security forces had cleared most of the Mehsud-majority areas after they had launched a major ground and air operation in October 2009. Most of the TTP leaders had later sneaked into the neighbouring North Waziristan.

The TTP spokesman said the ceasefire was expired six days ago however the government had been mysteriously tight lipped about the dialogue process.

“It seems that the real center of power are now active and want to impose decision of their choice on the people,” Shahidullah Shahid said.

He claimed that the Taliban had started dialogue with sincerity and adopted soft attitude during the talks on every phase of the process.

“We took all necessary steps that could provide strong basis for successful dialogue.”

“In spite of differences over the government’s demand for a unilateral ceasefire all the Taliban leadership convinced all unites to declare a month-long ceasefire in the best interests of Islam and the country. We gifted the month long ceasefire to the nation however the government has not made any progress on the TTP’s initial, genuine and just demands.”

He was of the view that the peace zone, release of the non-combatant prisoners and halt to “anti-Taliban operations” had been solid proposals to promote and build trust. “However, the government did not bother even to discuss the demands.”

Giving details of what the TTP spokesman claimed the losses as the result of the operations during the 40-day ceasefire, he alleged the government covertly continued its “root-out” operation that reflects the “non-seriousness” of the government.

“Our more than 50 colleagues, who had been arrested over links with the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, were martyred during the 40-day ceasefire,” Shahidullah Shahid went on to say.

“Over 200 innocent people were arrested from different areas for links with the TTP,” he further claimed.

The TTP spokesman said the security forces conducted nearly 100 raids and 25 search operations and “brutal torture of the TTP detainees had also been continued under a plan.”
== 

Monday, 31 March 2014

Pervez Musharraf indicted in high treason case





A special court in Pakistan on Monday formally charged former military President General (retired) Pervez Musharraf over the high treason charges for abrogating the country’s constitution when he had imposed emergency rule in 2007, court officials said.

Musharraf rejected the charges and pleaded non-guilty when he was allowed to speak on the charges. Musharraf told the court he has served Pakistan for over 40 years and also fought two wars.

The court had issued arrest order for the former President if he refused to appear on March 31st.  

The charge-sheet says that Musharraf, as the army chief, had illegally and unconstitutionally ordered imposition of emergency on November 2007.
Justice Ms. Tahira Safdar, a member on the three-member bench read out the charges.

The former military ruler heard all the charges and pleaded non-guilty.
Musharraf told the court that he respects the courts and he appeared nearly 17 times in courts in various cases. He explained his government performance and said he had done a lot for Pakistan.

Musharraf arrived in the court in Islamabad amid heavy security from a military hospital in the city of Rawalpindi where he was admitted in a military hospital in January. A police team had reached the Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology to arrest Musharraf in case he refused to appear.

Musharraf, who had taken over in a bloodless coup in 1999 and ruled the country until 2008 as the army chief and the President, also faces some other criminal charges including the murder of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. She was killed in December 2007.

Officials said that nearly 2000 paramilitary troops and the police had been deployed on the route between the hospital and the court.

Legal experts say the court can now formally begin high treason case after the indictment.

Saturday, 1 March 2014

Pakistan Taliban announce one-month ceasefire




By Tahir Khan

Pakistani Taliban, blamed for most of the terror attacks, on Saturday declared ceasefire for a month and asked its activists to stop all attacks amid airstrikes by the security forces in Waziristan tribal region.

The Taliban spokesman, Shahidullah Shahid, also called upon the government to stop airstrikes with a positive response to the Taliban's ceasefire decision.


The ceasefire was announced after a deadlock in rare peace dialogue between the government and a team of the Taliban intermediaries.


Last month a government committee had refused to hold more talks with the Taliban team unless they stop terror attacks.


The Taliban had previously refused to declare ceasefire and had called upon the government to announce ceasefire first.


The security forces had started targeted airstrikes in Waziristan tribal region after the Taliban refusal to stop attacks.


Interior Minister, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan had hinted in the parliament on Friday the security forces could launch a major operation in the coming weeks.


Analysts believe the Taliban have announced the ceasefire in view of the growing pressure from the army.


"On the appeal from senior religious scholars, in respect to the Taliban Dialogue Committee and in the best interest of Islam and the country, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan declares ceasefire for a month," a Taliban statement said.


The Taliban spokesman, Shahidullah Shahid, said that the Taliban's senior leaders have directed all units to show respect and implement the declaration of the ceasefire with the government and stop all attacks.


"We hope that the government will also seriously consider our decision and will make positive progress and will keep the dialogue process from politics,” he said.


The government committee welcomed the Taliban decision, which has raised hopes for the revival of the dialogue process.


The Taliban spokesman claimed that they had started talks with the government with good objectives and seriousness.


"As the government has positively responded to our suggestions to end the deadlock and ceasefire, so we have decided to declare ceasefire," he said.

==

Wednesday, 26 February 2014

Pakistan declares new security policy, Taliban to get response in case of violence





The government has decided to give priority to the dialogues with those militants who wanted to talk and those will face who continue terrorism in a new security policy unveiled in the parliament on Wednesday.

Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, who unveiled sailant features of the policy in the National Assembly,  said the the government has introduced basic change in its policy on terrorism and decided to target terrorist leadership in their headquarters.

Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, who also attended the parliament session, told the house that there is no confusion on part of the government to deal with terrorism and assured the lawmakers to seek their suggestions to curn the menace.

The Prime Minister said he will invite all the parliamentary leaders for a meeting to discuss the way forward and options to deal with the issue of terrorism.

“This is not the policy of any political party but of the state and every body should contribute to further improve it,” Nawaz Sharif said after the opposition leader, Syed Khurshid Shah said that the opposition had not been into confidence on the new security policy.

Khurshid Shah said the opposition parties should stand by the government for the security of the country.

The Prime Minister said that this is not  a final document and useful recommendations from the opposition and government benches could be incorporated in the document.

The Interior Minister did not make details of the first ever National Security Policy and said copies of the draft will be shared with the members of the parliament later for a debate in the house.

He, however, said the 100-page policy document comprised of three parts, one of which will remain secret, adding that input of all the stakeholders was taken for the formulation of policy. He said one part of the policy is related to the strategic issues including the option of dialogue with the militants and the other with operations against them.

The Federal Cabinet in a meeting, presided over by the Prime Minister, approved the draft on Tuesday.  The policy will be implemened after debate in both houses of the parliament.

Khan said that a Rapid Response Force will also be establsihed that will keep coordination with all security institutions. The National Counter Terrorism Authority (NACTA), that been formed in 2012 to devise state anti-terror policies but had been inactive, would be revived in the new policy, he went on to say.

Talking about dialogue with the Taliban militants, the Interior Minister said talks were held with commitment and transparently, however‚ unfortunately the violence in the country did not come to an end.

He informed the parliament that the Prime Minister, in the wake of grave violent incidents, has decided to suspend the talks and has also ordered to give a response to the militants if they carry out any terror act.

“Violence and talks cannot move forward simultaneously,”Khan told the parliament, adding the government, under a policy shift, will not remain silent if the Taliban continue terrorism.

Nisar appealed to the media and politicians that statements issued by the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan should not be accorded much importance, adding that it was not a good idea to give space to the TTP’s points of view on each and every issue. 

=

Monday, 24 February 2014

Afghan Taliban who slain 21 troops in Kunar entered from Pakistan, claims Kabul



Afghanistan claimed on Monday that the militants who attacked a border check post in eastern Kunar border region and killed 21 Afghan soldiers had entered from Pakistani side of the border.

The Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman, Ahmed Shakeeb Mustaghni, however did not directly blame Pakistan for the incident and said investigations are underway.

Afghan Taliban had claimed responsbility for the late Saturday attack and their spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said the Taliban fighters had also captured the post.

“One thing is very clear that the terrorists had entered Afghanistan and attacked the Afghan National Army’s troops had come from the areas which are currently under Pakistan’s control,” Mustaghni told his weekly press briefing in Kabul.

The Afghan Defence Minister Bismillah Mohammadi also said in Kabul on Monday that “a country has been involved in the killing of 21 ANA troops.” He did not name any country.

He told a ceremony of handing over bodies of the salin soldiers to their families that Afghan and foreign Taliban had launched the attack but a country has also role in the incident, according to Afghan state Bakhtar news agency.

The Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman did not directly respond to a question when asked if Pakistan was behind the attack.

“More investigations are required whether or not Pakistan has taken revenge,” Mustaghni said when he was asked if the attack was a reaction to the killing of 23 Frontier Corps men by the Pakistan Taliban last week.

Pakistan believes the FC personnel had been executed on the Afghan side of the border by the Taliban Mohmand agency chapter who operate along the border region.

“I once again want to insist that such incidents underscores the need for Afghanistan to urge Pakistan to extend sincere cooperation to fight terrorism,” the Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman said.
“As we have earlier stated and we still believe that any terrorist act is the result of the short-sighted policy to use terrorism as a mean of strategic influence. Terrorism is the common enemy of Pakistan and Afghanistan and we have always called for sincere cooperation,” he went on to say.

President Hamid Karzai, who had cancelled his planned visit to Sri Lanka due to the attack, had urged launched a fresh appeal to Pakstan to cooperate to fight terrorism.

The Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman said Kabul could come up with a fiormal protest once investigation into the Kunar attack is completed and evidences collected.

The Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid had claimed that they had destroyed the check post at Ghazi Abad district in Kunar. However, correspondents in the region had disputed the claim and the post still stand in the same position.

The Taliban have also taken away nearly six ANA soldiers alive and Afghan officials were busy on Monday to secure their release.
==

Saturday, 22 February 2014

Afghan Taliban say exchange of prisoners with US suspended







Afghan Taliban Sunday said they have suspended process of transfer of prisoners with the United States due to the “current complicated political environment in Afghanistan.

Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl  has been held prisoner since 2009, when he walked off an American base in eastern Afghanistan and fell into the hands of militants.

In January, the Taliban sent a video to Bergdahl family in the United States that proved he is still alive, prompting officials to consider new terms for a swap.

“The leadership of the Afghnistan Islamic Emirate had assigned the Political Office of the Islamic Emirate to take steps for the exchange of their priosners in Guantanamo with one U.S. soldier in our custody through the mediation of Qatar,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement.

“Political Office started work on the exchange and some progress was made through mediation that included the release of the recent video to prove that the prioser is alive.”

The Taiban spokesman confirmed the video was part of the negotiations with the U.S.

“However the leadership of the Islamic Emirate has now decided to postpone the process of the transfer of the priosners for some time due to the current complex political situation in the country. The process will remain suspended without the exchange of the prsoners until next order,” the Taliban spokesman said.

Sources say that the Americans wanted to transfer the Guantanamo Five prisoners and exchange for Bergdahl.

Reports also suggested one of the five is a Haqqani operative and there is some suggestion that he is included because they believe the Haqqanis are holding Bergdahl and will use this to get them to open talks.

A Taliban official had recently confirmed there had been indirect talks on the prisoners' exchange issue.

President Obama’s adviser, Bernet Rubin, had visited Kabul recently to get views of the Afghan officials. He had then traveled to Qatar to continue discussions, however, the Taliban sources said he had not held direct talks with the Taliban representatives in the Gulf state.
==



Afghan govt, Taliban leaders confirm Dubai talks





The Afghan government-backed negotiators and Taliban leaders Saturday confirmed peace talks in the United Arab Emirate and said both have agreed to initiate formal talks inside and outside Afghanistan.

The Taliban former Finance Minister Mutasim Agha Jan, who led his team in talks with a four-member delegation of the Afghan High Peace Council in Dubai, said the Taliban leaders have agreed to peacefully resolve the Afghan issue.

In Kabul the peace council also said the Taliban leaders have agreed to join the intra-Afghan dialogue. 

The Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid has recently disowned peace efforts by Mutasim Agha Jan and said the group has not assigned any responsibility to him.

Mutasim, also a former close aide of Mullah Omar, who once headed the Taliban’s powerful Political Council, has now launched his peace movement the “Islamic Movement of Taliban” and claimed in an earlier interview that his recent meeting in Dubai was attended by seven former Taliban ministers and other top leaders and military commanders.

The Taliban leader said Saturday a high ranking delegation of his faction met with senior members of the Afghan High Peace Council recently in the UAE and both sides agreed to analyze all dimensions of the issue deeply and to find a permanent solution instead of working on interim formats of the solution.

“They also agreed upon convincing all the faction to play their role seriously to bring peace and stability to the country,” Mutasim said after the meeting.

He said the Taliban leaders in the Dubai meeting had shown their willing towards an everlasting peace and prosperity, establishing an Islamic system and ultimately making an end to current crisis through an intra-Afghan dialogue.

Both sides also agreed to call the UN Security Council for removal of Taliban leaders’ names from black list and lifting sanctions on their travels and other activities.

Representatives of the Islamic Movement of Taliban welcomed the recent decision of Afghan president Hamid Karzai regarding release of Taliban and other Afghan prisoners from Bagram detention centre, Mutasim said in a statement sent to the media late Saturday.

“They  (Taliban negotiators) also urged the Afghan government via HPC delegation to release immediately all those remaining Afghans kept in various jails, detention centers as well as other military and intelligence camps.”

Both sides also agreed mutually upon introducing a team of clerics and academics from the Islamic Movement of Taliban to work for peace and reconciliation.

The team from one hand would have to be sincere to the case while from other hand their names would neither be in black list, thus they could participate freely in meetings, talks and conferences held for finding solution to the crisis, the Mutasim said.