Afghanistan to release 400 'hard-core' Taliban to start peace talks
 
Afghanistan agreed on Sunday to release 400
“hard-core” Taliban prisoners, paving the way for the beginning of peace talks
aimed at ending more than 19 years of war.
Under election-year pressure from U.S. President
Donald Trump for a deal allowing him to bring home American troops, the
war-torn country’s grand assembly, or Loya Jirga, on Sunday approved the
release, a controversial condition raised by the Taliban militants to join
peace talks.
“In order to remove an obstacle, allow the start of
the peace process and an end of bloodshed, the Loya Jirga approves the release
of 400 Taliban,” the assembly said in a resolution.
Afghan prisoner release: What it is, what it means
for peace
Key dates since the start of the 2001 war in
Afghanistan and efforts to broker peace
Minutes later, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said,
“Today, I will sign the release order of these 400 prisoners.”
Last week Ghani invited some 3,200 Afghan community
leaders and politicians to Kabul amid tight security and concerns about the
COVID-19 pandemic to advise the government on whether the prisoners should be
freed.
With the release, the Afghan government will fulfil
its pledge to release 5,000 Taliban prisoners.
Talks between the warring Taliban and government
will start in Doha this week, Western diplomats said. Ghani appealed to the
hardline Islamist group to pledge to a complete ceasefire ahead of talks.
Deliberation over the release of last batch of
Taliban prisoners, accused of conducting some of the bloodiest attacks across
Afghanistan, had triggered outrage among civilians and rights groups who
questioned the morality of the peace process.
In 2019 alone, more than 10,000 civilians were
killed or injured in the conflict in Afghanistan, putting total casualties in
the past decade over 100,000, a United Nations report said last year.
Ahead of the Loya Jirga, Human Rights Watch
cautioned that many of the prisoners had been jailed under “overly broad
terrorism laws that provide for indefinite preventive detention”.
Ahead of November U.S. elections, Trump is
determined to fulfil a major campaign promise of ending America’s longest war.
The drawdown will bring the number of U.S. troops to
“a number less than 5,000” by the end of November, Defense Secretary Mark Esper
said in an interview broadcast on Saturday.
In a February pact allowing for the withdrawal of
U.S. troops, Washington and the Taliban agreed on the release of the Taliban
prisoners as a condition for the talks with Kabul.
          
     
                               
 
 


