Next round of Afghan peace talks to take place in Doha: official

The next round of negotiations between the Taliban
and the Afghan government will be held in Qatar from next month, a top official
said Sunday, despite President Ashraf Ghani's recent calls for them to be moved
home.
Peace talks began on September 12 at a luxury hotel
in Doha, but negotiations are currently on a break until January 5.
"The second round of talks will begin on
January 5 in Doha," said Faraidoon Khwazoon, spokesman for Afghanistan's
High Council for National Reconciliation, which is leading the overall peace
process in the country.
"The leadership committee of the council ...
decided to hold the talks in Doha," he tweeted, adding that many of the
countries that had earlier volunteered to host the talks withdrew their offers
because of Covid-19.
In a separate statement, the presidency tweeted that
Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah, who heads the council, held a meeting on Sunday.
The two "discussed the venue for the next round
of talks" after which Ghani announced the government's support for a second
stage of talks with the Taliban, the presidency said.
Earlier in December, negotiators from both sides
decided to take a break after months of often frustrating meetings which were
bogged down by disputes on the basic framework of discussions and religious
interpretations.
Prior to going on the break, negotiators finally
announced they were ready to proceed on preliminary lists of agenda items when
talks resumed on January 5.
But Ghani and some other top Afghan officials
immediately called for the next round of meetings to be held in Afghanistan.
"It is not appropriate to insist on holding
talks in luxurious hotels. It is necessary that the people see how the talks
happen, which issues are focused on and why," Ghani said soon after the
break in talks was announced.
The Taliban did not comment on Ghani's call, but
they have in the past always refused to hold the negotiations in Afghanistan.
The insurgent group has a political office in Doha
and its negotiating team resides there.
The talks follow a landmark troop withdrawal deal
signed in February by the Taliban and Washington, which will see all foreign
soldiers leave the violence-wracked country by May next year.
Plans for renewed negotiations come amid a surge of
violence across Afghanistan in recent months, including in Kabul, which has
seen regular bomb attacks and targeted killings of prominent figures.