Afghanistan: US and Taliban hold first face-to-face talks since withdrawal

Afghanistan: US and Taliban hold first face-to-face talks since withdrawal

Funerals were held for victims of a suicide attack

 WASHINGTON, Oct 11 (NNN-AGENCIES) — US officials have met Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban for their first face-to-face talks since Washington pulled its troops from the country in August.

The talks in Qatar are focusing on issues including containing extremist groups, the evacuation of US citizens and humanitarian aid, officials say.

The US insists the meeting does not amount to recognition of the Taliban.

It comes after Afghanistan suffered its deadliest attack since US forces withdrew.

The Friday suicide bombing at a mosque in the northern city of Kunduz killed at least 50 people and wounded more than 100 others.

The Said Abad mosque was used by the minority Shia Muslim community in the Sunni Muslim-majority country. The Daesh group said it was behind the attack.

Speaking after the talks with the US opened in Qatar, Afghanistan’s Taliban-appointed Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said the two sides had agreed to uphold the terms of the Doha agreement signed in 2020.

The deal includes broad obligations on the Taliban to take steps to prevent groups such as al-Qaeda from threatening the security of the US and its allies.

Muttaqi said US officials had also told the Taliban they would help in delivering Covid vaccines and humanitarian aid.

The US has not yet commented on the details of Saturday and Sunday’s talks, but a state department spokesperson previously said officials would use the meeting to press the Taliban to respect women’s rights, form an inclusive government and allow humanitarian agencies to operate.

Muttaqi told reporters that the Taliban group wanted to improve relations with the international community but also warned that nobody should interfere with any country’s internal policies.

American officials have said the talks are a continuation of engagement with the Taliban on matters of national interest, not about giving legitimacy to the group’s government.

As the talks were taking place in the Qatari capital Doha, in Afghanistan funeral ceremonies were being held for the victims of Friday’s attack.

The United Nations said the bombing was a “third deadly attack apparently targeting a religious institution” and was part of a “disturbing pattern of violence”. — NNN-AGENCIES

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