Releasing a dangerous terrorist through Qatari mediation
By Shaima
Hefzy
: A top
Taliban commander held in Pakistani detention for more than eight years has
been freed, sources said last Thursday, in an apparent move to aid tentative
talks between the United States and the terrorist group.
The release
of Abdul Ghani Baradar -- the former right-hand man of Taliban founder Mullah
Omar, who died in 2013 -- came less than two weeks after US envoy Zalmay
Khalilzad met with the group's representatives in Qatar to discuss ending the
Afghan conflict.
Baradar was
among several senior Taliban leaders freed this week, after the Taliban
demanded their release in direct talks with Khalilzad on October 12, a senior
Taliban leader told news agency AFP on the condition of anonymity.
"We
believe that they were released at the US's request," the leader said.
He said
Baradar would likely stay in Pakistan and shuttle between the Taliban's Doha
office, Kabul and Islamabad.
"It was
important for confidence building and all three will participate in the next
round of talks with the US in Qatar," he added.
Baradar was
the most high-profile Afghan Taliban leader detained by Pakistan since the 9/11
attacks in 2001.
He was
arrested in the southern port city of Karachi in 2010, reportedly in an
operation that was described as a huge blow to the terrorist group, which ruled
Afghanistan from 1996-2001 when it was toppled by a US-led invasion.
It was not
clear what role, if any, he would play in peace talks.
"Baradar
was freed yesterday afternoon and he joined his family," Afghan Taliban
spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told news agency AFP in a WhatsApp message.
A Pakistani
intelligence official also said Baradar was "released a couple of days
ago".
Baradar's
release comes after the recent election of Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan,
who has long advocated talks with the Taliban and other Islamist insurgents in
the region to bring an end to years of fighting.
Pakistan's
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi earlier this month also pledged to
support negotiations with the Taliban as the country lobbies the United States
to restore military aid.
The United
States has long pressed Pakistan to crack down on the Taliban and other
terrorist groups, which Washington says have safe havens in Pakistan's border
areas and links to its shadowy military establishment -- charges Islamabad has
repeatedly denied.