Nascent peace process: Afghan Taliban not willing to talk, says Aziz

Adviser to PM believes Taliban leadership has not authorised Mullah Baradar to open consultations.


Tahir Khan December 15, 2013
Adviser to PM believes Taliban leadership has not authorised Mullah Baradar to open consultations.

ISLAMABAD:


Despite Pakistan’s efforts to facilitate talks between the Afghan High Peace Council and the Afghan Taliban, the group is unwilling to enter into negotiation, Adviser to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz said on Saturday.


“The Afghan Taliban have a principled stance that they do not recognise the government in Kabul and the constitution,” Aziz told The Express Tribune on the conclusion of the Pakistan-Afghanistan conference in the capital.

“There is a need for increased informal contacts with them [Taliban] as most of their leaders are in Afghanistan and in Qatar, and the Afghan government can approach them,” he added.

“We do not have control over the Afghan Taliban. We have been urging them for a long time to talk to the High Peace Council but they do not accept our requests,” Aziz said.

Asked about the possible relocation of the Taliban office from Qatar, he said the venue was not important. He said the new office could come up in ‘Turkey or Saudi Arabia’ but that the important facet was that they agree to talk.

He confirmed that High Peace Council’s members met former Taliban chief strategist Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar in Pakistan last month. “They [Afghan council] met him but later said he [Baradar] was not feeling well so they were unable to hold detailed talks. I think Mullah Baradar had no permission from his leadership to talk,” Aziz said.

“Meetings with Mullah Baradar will be useful when the Taliban leadership allows and gives him authority to talk on their behalf,” he added.

Asked why Mullah Baradar has not yet been allowed to rejoin his family like the 50 other freed Taliban detainees in one year, he said President Hamid Karzai had insisted that Mullah Baradar could play a role in the reconciliation process when he is accessible.

“If he [Mullah Baradar] is inaccessible, he will not be traced and that is why we have kept the situation as per the expectations of the Afghan government,” Aziz said.

He pointed out that the Afghan negotiators could have access to Mullah Baradar and insisted that he is allowed visits by family members. “But we provide him security and cannot let him go,” he said.

“Pakistan has also in principle agreed to allow Mullah Baradar to go abroad if Afghanistan agrees,” the adviser said.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 15th, 2013.

COMMENTS (27)

Jalil | 10 years ago | Reply

@Bakhtiyar do pasthuns not have representation and honor right now? What more do you want? Also, are you saying all pasthuns support taliban?

numbersnumbers | 11 years ago | Reply

@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan: BTW, of course you meant include Pakistan in your list of "other people interfering in Afghan's lives"!

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