Senior Afghan lawmaker opposes Pakistan role in peace deal with Taliban

11 March, 2015 13:50

A senior Afghan lawmaker has warned President Ashraf Ghani about relying on Pakistan to help broker peace talks with the Taliban, citing what he said was Islamabad’s history of supporting the Wahhabis-allied Deobandi Taliban.

 

Afghanistan has long accused Pakistan of backing the Taliban to push its own agenda in the war-torn country, and Ghani’s rapprochement with Islamabad since coming to power last year has led to unease in some quarters.

“I am in support of peace and stability in Afghanistan, but I don’t have much faith in Pakistan’s honesty over peace talks,” Fazil Hadi Muslimyar, speaker of the upper house of parliament, told Reuters.

“President Ashraf Ghani must have a guarantee from Pakistan that if the Taliban enter into negotiations, Pakistan will not use other militants as proxies [to fight against Afghanistan],” he said.

Rangin Dadfar Spanta, a former national security adviser in the last government, said he supported the peace initiative, but also had concerns about Pakistan’s role in the process.

“Pakistan’s military and its intelligence agency are the forces behind the Taliban, and that prevents me from being hopeful,” Spanta said.

Ghani’s government, meanwhile, has told skeptics that Pakistan is committed to peace talks aimed at ending 13 years of conflict between the Taliban, ousted in a U.S.-led war in 2001, and Afghan and foreign forces.

“Recent messages and actions from Pakistan indicate that Pakistan is committed to bringing peace and stability to Afghanistan,” a spokesman for Ghani said.
A record 3,700 civilians were killed in the conflict last year and thousands more Afghan soldiers and police, as foreign combat troops withdrew from Afghanistan and left security to local forces who complain of lack of equipment and training.
Previous attempts to bring Deobandi Taliban terrorists to the negotiating table have failed in recent years, and there are major hurdles in the way of progress this time around, despite the involvement of China in the latest push for peace.

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