Taliban say team in Qatar for Afghan peace talks

The Taliban's negotiating team has arrived in Qatar,
a spokesman said Saturday, in a sign that long-delayed peace talks with the
Afghan government are inching closer to starting.
A date for the talks, to be hosted in Doha, has not
been set but the warring sides have this week made signals that negotiations
could launch soon, including efforts to wrap up a drawn out prisoner exchange.
"All members of our negotiating team have
arrived in Doha. The talks will begin once some small technical issues are
resolved," Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen told AFP.
The Taliban team had recently been in Pakistan
discussing the peace process with the government in Islamabad.
Qatar authorities have been imposing a seven day
quarantine period on all arrivals to the country, but have made exemptions for
some delegations who undergo regular testing.
The Afghan government's negotiating team remained in
Kabul on Saturday, but a logistics team landed in Doha earlier this week.
Faraidoon Khawzoon, a spokesman for the Afghan government's
reconciliation council, said its negotiating team was ready for talks.
"The release of the prisoners is completed and
there is no excuse for delaying the talks," he tweeted.
"But the Taliban don't seem to be ready for the
talks. We expect the Taliban to get ready and start the negotiations."
The talks were initially due to begin in March as
set out in a deal between the United States and the Taliban in February, from
which Kabul was excluded.
But disagreements over ongoing violence and the prisoner
swap have seen the start repeatedly pushed back.