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Peace talks between Pakistan and Taliban collapse after killings
An emergency meeting of the government’s committee has been convened to review the latest situation following the murder of 23 FC security men.
Peace talks between the Pakistani government and Taliban insurgents broke down on Monday, the government said, after insurgents executed 23 paramilitary soldiers in what they said was revenge for army operations in the volatile tribal regions.
The Taliban faction in Mohmand tribal region said that 23 security personnel, who had been captured in 2010, were killed on Sunday as revenge to what it called “extra-judicial killing of its detained activists”.
The incident has turned out to be a serious setback for the ongoing fragile peace process and Taliban are blamed for its terrorist activities.
“The government’s dialogue committee, which was scheduled to hold talks with the Taliban mediators on Monday, will not meet them,” Xinhua quoted coordinator of the government committee, Irfan Siddiqui, said.
“The meeting would be useless following the martyrdom of the 23 security men,” Siddiqui said in a statement.
He said the government’s negotiation team has unanimously described the incident as shocking and utterly condemnable.
He said the recent series of terror attacks have had a negative impact on the ongoing serious peace process.
“The nation expects urgent and positive results of the dialogue process to stop more bloodshed in Pakistan,” Siddiqui said, adding that it was sad the talks were not heading in the right direction.
Siddiqui said that an emergency meeting of the government’s committee has been convened on Tuesday to review the latest situation following the killing of 23 security men.
Another member of the government’s team, Rahimullah Yousafzai, termed the emerging situation as very serious after the Taliban’s killing of the security personnel.
Yousafzai told the media that the official team would seek a clarification from the Taleban committee about the incident.
Days before Sunday’s killings of the security men, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had termed the previous attacks as a serious setback for the dialogue
process.
The government is expected to come under real pressure to act against the Taliban as there has been no let-up in the terror attacks.
An emergency meeting of the government’s committee has been convened to review the latest situation following the murder of 23 FC security men.
Peace talks between the Pakistani government and Taliban insurgents broke down on Monday, the government said, after insurgents executed 23 paramilitary soldiers in what they said was revenge for army operations in the volatile tribal regions.
The Taliban faction in Mohmand tribal region said that 23 security personnel, who had been captured in 2010, were killed on Sunday as revenge to what it called “extra-judicial killing of its detained activists”.
The incident has turned out to be a serious setback for the ongoing fragile peace process and Taliban are blamed for its terrorist activities.
“The government’s dialogue committee, which was scheduled to hold talks with the Taliban mediators on Monday, will not meet them,” Xinhua quoted coordinator of the government committee, Irfan Siddiqui, said.
“The meeting would be useless following the martyrdom of the 23 security men,” Siddiqui said in a statement.
He said the government’s negotiation team has unanimously described the incident as shocking and utterly condemnable.
He said the recent series of terror attacks have had a negative impact on the ongoing serious peace process.
“The nation expects urgent and positive results of the dialogue process to stop more bloodshed in Pakistan,” Siddiqui said, adding that it was sad the talks were not heading in the right direction.
Siddiqui said that an emergency meeting of the government’s committee has been convened on Tuesday to review the latest situation following the killing of 23 security men.
Another member of the government’s team, Rahimullah Yousafzai, termed the emerging situation as very serious after the Taliban’s killing of the security personnel.
Yousafzai told the media that the official team would seek a clarification from the Taleban committee about the incident.
Days before Sunday’s killings of the security men, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had termed the previous attacks as a serious setback for the dialogue
process.
The government is expected to come under real pressure to act against the Taliban as there has been no let-up in the terror attacks.