Jakarta Globe, November 30, 2012
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Islamabad.
Pakistan on Friday agreed to release another batch of Taliban prisoners in a
bid to facilitate peace talks between insurgents and the Afghan government, a
joint foreign ministry statement said.
The
announcement came after talks in Islamabad between visiting Afghan Foreign
Minister Zalmai Rassoul and his Pakistani counterpart Hina Rabbani Khar. The
number of prisoners to be released was not specified but is not thought to
include the Taliban’s former deputy leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, who was
captured in 2010.
A senior
Pakistani security official earlier told AFP that “no decision” had been taken
on his release.
The joint
statement said both sides agreed the “release of more prisoners, facilitating
contacts and urging the Taliban to renounce ties to Al-Qaeda.”
It was the
second high-level delegation to visit Pakistan this month to press for the
release of Taliban prisoners in a bid to kick-start peace efforts. Talks two
weeks ago between Pakistan and Afghanistan’s High Peace Council resulted in the
release of nine Taliban.
Afghan
officials believe senior Taliban leaders held in Pakistan could help bring
militants to the negotiating table, if released from jail, to end over a decade
of war ahead of the 2014 pull-out of US-led NATO troops.
“I hope
that we will continue to implement other concrete measures in a timely manner
and push the peace process forward… so that all those who can help advance the
peace process go free,” Rassoul told reporters after talks with his Pakistani
counterpart.
An Afghan
official had told AFP ahead of the meetings that Rassoul would ask for the
release of further Taliban detainees, including Baradar.
But a
senior Pakistani security official told AFP that “no decision” had so far been
taken on whether to release him.
“We have to
ascertain how important he can be. Pakistan believes Baradar may not be
enjoying the same clout he used to have before being arrested in Karachi two
years ago,” the official said.
The
Taliban, leading an 11-year insurgency since the 2001 US-led invasion, has
welcomed the releases, but refuses to negotiate directly with Kabul, calling
the government of President Hamid Karzai a US puppet.
Preliminary
contacts between the United States and the Taliban in Doha were broken off in
March when the militants failed to secure the release of five of their comrades
held at the Guantanamo Bay prison on the US base in Cuba.
Support
from Pakistan, which backed the 1996-2001 Taliban regime in Kabul, is seen as
crucial to peace in Afghanistan after the departure of NATO forces.
The joint
statement said the two sides also discussed the issue of cross border
incursions and shelling and agreed to have an institutionalized mechanism to
address this issue.
Afghanistan
and Pakistan blame each other for a number of recent cross-border attacks that
have killed dozens of people.
Afghanistan
shares a disputed and unmarked 2,400-kilometer border with Pakistan, and
Taliban and other Al-Qaeda-linked militants have carved out strongholds on
either side.
Agence France-Presse

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