Afghan peace talks resume as bloodshed continues

A
string of assassinations has sowed fear and chaos across Afghanistan as a fresh
round of peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban begin in
Qatar Tuesday.
Months
of deliberations between the two sides have yielded little so far, but both
parties made something of a breakthrough last year when they finally agreed at
least on what to discuss in the next round.
Afghan
government negotiators will push for a permanent ceasefire and to protect the
existing system of governance, in place since the ouster of the Taliban in 2001
by a US-led invasion in the wake of the September 11 attacks.
"The talks are going to be very
complicated and time-consuming," Ghulam Farooq Majroh, a government
negotiator told AFP.
"But we are hopeful to arrive at a
result as soon as possible as people are tired of this bloody war."
The
Taliban did not offer any comment.
The
first direct talks between the warring sides opened in September after months
of delays, but quickly became bogged down by disputes on the basic framework of
discussions and religious interpretations.
A
concerted diplomatic effort from Washington finally led to a consensus.
The
negotiations follow a landmark troop withdrawal deal signed in February by the
Taliban and Washington, which saw the US pledge to pull out all foreign forces
from Afghanistan by May 2021.
The
talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban have been marred by an
increase in violence from the start, but a new trend is a wave of high-profile
targeted killings of officials, activists, and journalists.
The
deputy governor for Kabul province, five journalists, and a prominent election
activist have been among those assassinated in Kabul and other cities since
November.
Officials
blame the Taliban for the mayhem, although the jihadist Islamic State group has
claimed some of the assaults.
"The Taliban aim to divide the people
and trigger criticism and frustration against the government's security
institutions with these assassinations," Javid Faisal, an adviser to the
National Security Council, told AFP.
"But the killings are uniting people."
Nishank
Motwani, deputy director of the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit think
tank, said the Taliban would not formally claim responsibility for the
political assassinations, but nevertheless wanted to demonstrate "to its
cadre that the Taliban are who they are and have not changed".
The
Taliban carried out more than 18,000 attacks across the country in 2020,
Afghanistan's spy chief Ahmad Zia Siraj told lawmakers this week.
The
first nine months of last year saw 2,177 civilians killed and 3,822 wounded,
according to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan. Ordinary Afghans long for better security but
hold little hope for an immediate improvement despite the talks. "We have no security at all in Kabul.
For how long will we need to keep burying our loved ones?" said Jamshid
Mohammad, a resident of Kabul.