What's new

Pak agrees to release more Taliban

UmarJustice

FULL MEMBER

New Recruit

Joined
Sep 4, 2012
Messages
50
Reaction score
0
KABUL, Afghanistan – Afghanistan wants Pakistan to free more Taliban detainees to help coax the group into negotiations to end the 11-year-old war.
An Afghan official says Foreign Minister Zalmay Rasoul will ask Pakistan during a visit to Islamabad on Friday to release more Taliban prisoners to jumpstart the peace process. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss Rasoul's agenda.
Earlier this month, Pakistan released nine Taliban leaders in a move that Kabul said was a positive step toward finding a way to reconcile with the militants.
Afghan officials have long sought the release of the Taliban's former deputy leader, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar.
Baradar was captured in Pakistan in 2010 because he reportedly was having secret talks with the Afghans.

Afghanistan wants Pakistan to release more Taliban detainees to jumpstart the peace process | Fox News
 
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar met with her Afghan counterpart Zalmai Rassoul here on Friday.

In a joint statement issued following the meeting, Pakistan agreed to release another batch of Taliban prisoners in a bid to facilitate peace talks between insurgents and the Afghan government.

Both sides also agreed to operationalize a Joint Commission to address the prisoners issue as announced during the visit of President Karzai to Islamabad in June 2011.

The two countries also reaffirmed their commitment to jointly overcome the challenges of terrorism and extremism.

Following the meeting during a joint news conference, Pakistan also announced its support for a Ulema conference scheduled to take place in Kabul in January, 2013.

Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said that Pakistan is keen to strengthen its ties with Afghanistan and it also supports the peace process in the neighbouring country.

Khar told reporters that a delegation of Afghan Peace Council visited Pakistan few days ago and their trip went ‘successful.’

Khar said that she herself visited Afghanistan four times and the Afghan Foreign Minister arrived in Islamabad on the country’s invitation.

She said that both the neighbouring countries are facing same challenges of terrorism and narcotics.

On the occasion, the Afghan Foreign Minister Zalmai Rassoul said that his country would not allow its soil to be used against Pakistan. He said that the two countries discussed Afghan peace process during their talks.

Pak agrees to release more Taliban - thenews.com.pk
 
ap-pakistan-afghanistan-4_3_r560.jpg


ISLAMABAD:
Pakistan has agreed to release another batch of Taliban prisoners in a bid to facilitate the nascent peace process in war-torn Afghanistan.
The announcement was made following talks between Afghan Foreign Minister Dr Zalmai Rassoul and his Pakistani counterpart Hina Rabbani Khar on Friday. Rassoul also met with Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf and Army chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Friday.
It was the second high-powered Afghan delegation to visit Islamabad this month to press for the release of Taliban inmates. Earlier this month, talks between Pakistani officials and the Afghan High Peace Council resulted in the release of nine mid-level Taliban cadres.
A joint statement issued after Friday’s talks did not specify the number of Taliban prisoners to be released. However, a senior security official said former Taliban No 2 Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar was not among them.
“This is a very delicate process and we need a step-by-step approach to deal with this issue,” the official told The Express Tribune.
Appearing at a news conference with his Pakistani counterpart, the Afghan foreign minister demanded the release of all Taliban prisoners who could help bring the militants to the negotiating table.
“We want all Afghan Taliban to return to their country, join the constitutional political process there and play their part in furthering the construction and development of our nation,” said Rassoul.
According to diplomatic sources, the Afghan side appreciated the earlier release of mid-ranking Taliban cadres, but wanted to see an early return of Mullah Baradar who, they believe, could invigorate the fledgling peace process.
Mullah Baradar was arrested from Karachi in 2010. At the time of his arrest, he was reportedly engaged in talks with US and Afghan government officials to broker a peace deal.
Foreign Minister Khar told reporters that the issue of Afghan prisoners was discussed “thoroughly [at the talks], and I’m quite sure that we would all agree that we are making forward movement.”
She disclosed that the two sides had agreed to revive a joint commission formed last year to address the issue of prisoners.
While Islamabad and Kabul attempted to resurrect the peace talks, they also agreed to hold a joint conference of religious scholars in Kabul in January next year. The proposed “Ulema Conference” would help evolve a consensus among different schools of thought against the Taliban ideology.

The conference would issue a fatwa (religious decree) declaring suicide attacks un-Islamic, a senior Pakistani official told The Express Tribune.
Zalmai Rassoul’s visit also marked the start of formal negotiations between the two neighbours to finalise a long-term strategic partnership agreement.
Khar said Pakistan shared a draft proposal on the strategic pact with the Afghan side. She hoped the two countries would conclude the deal at the earliest. “We hope that, as we start this journey today, this will contribute to stronger bilateral track between the two countries.”
The proposed strategic pact, one official pointed out, would lead to increased security and intelligence cooperation between the two neighbours.
The two sides also discussed the issue of cross-border incursions and shelling and agreed to have an institutionalised mechanism to address this issue.
While expressing satisfaction at the current volume of annual bilateral trade ($2.5 billion), the two countries agreed to take facilitative steps to achieve the target of $5 billion annual trade by 2015.
Recognising the need for jointly pursuing trade and transit agreements with Central Asian states, the statement said the two sides agreed that as a first step a trilateral transit and trade agreement will be negotiated with Tajikistan, to be extended to other countries as appropriate and mutually determined.
Both countries agreed to work together for phased, dignified and voluntary return of Afghan refugees and stressed the need for creating “pull factors” for this purpose. Afghanistan thanked Pakistan for hosting the largest number of refugees in the world for more than three decades.

Afghan peace process: Pakistan agrees to free more Taliban prisoners – The Express Tribune
 
**** Afghanistan and **** their Taliban terrorists... Hang these bastards on Afghan-Pak border
 
these CIA backed hell deservers need to be exterminated, pakistan doesnt need to bow down or compromise on its security
 
Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Decesion! Enough said!

These same ungratefull people will join TTP and attack Pakistan army and it's assets/allies!
 
at least they could have traded the taliban with dr.afia...
when will our "leaders" learn diplomacy
 
Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Bad Decesion! Enough said!

These same ungratefull people will join TTP and attack Pakistan army and it's assets/allies!

Yeah, it seems so.

The goras are happy for the same reason, they will get additional players.
 
I have a hard time believing our intelligence agency doesn't have some trick up it's sleeve.

Bro these are Afghan Taliban and Karzai asked for their release, if they start fighting again it is not Pakistan's problem.
 
Now where are all the people who call Imran Khan "Taliban Khan" ?
yeah that's right, you people are sitting in your caves with egg on your face.
 
Bro these are Afghan Taliban and Karzai asked for their release, if they start fighting again it is not Pakistan's problem.

Another thing is that these elements are extremely anti-Taliban terrorists. So it makes sense to release them to strengthen forces against the Taliban terrorists.
 
Back
Top Bottom