ToolTip PluginAdvertisers

Afghanistan frees nearly 200 Taliban prisoners to push peace talks (Reuters)

Start Date: Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Last Modified: Friday, September 4, 2020

End Date: Friday, December 31, 9999


KABUL (Reuters) - The Afghan government released nearly 200 Taliban prisoners to spur the start of long-delayed peace negotiations, senior Afghan officials said on Wednesday.


The fresh releases are from a group of 400 "hardcore" Taliban prisoners, the fate of which has stalled peace negotiations between the government and insurgent group to end nearly two decades of war in Afghanistan.


This group of prisoners were released from the main jail in the capital Kabul on Monday evening and Tuesday at the same time six Afghan special forces members held by the Taliban were freed, the officials said.


"We want to finish the prisoner swap so we could start the peace process as soon as possible," said a senior Government official, who declined to be name because of the sensitivity of the issue.


A source close to the process said the prisoner swap could be finished by today.


The 400 are the remainder of 5,000 Taliban prisoners set for release from Afghan jails as part of a pact in February between the United States and the Taliban allowing for the withdrawal of U.S. troops. Their release was a condition for talks between the government and the insurgent group to start.


The Afghan government was reluctant to release any of the 400, which it says have been involved in some of the worst crimes including major attacks such as the 2017 truck bombing near the Germany Embassy in Kabul, until the Taliban released 24 Afghan special forces members and pilots first.


Keeping the prisoners went against the wishes of a loya jirga that gathered in Kabul last month. The loya jirga is a traditional assembly of thousands of Afghan elders and community leaders that meets to decide political issues.


The government responded by releasing about 80 of the 400 prisoners last month. A Government official said the others were kept because the Taliban dismissed calls from the loya jirga for a ceasefire.


The exchange this week occurred as Taliban violence and clashes with Afghan troops have increased in recent days.


A Taliban car bomb killed three Afghan security forces in eastern Paktia province on Tuesday, a local official said, while a defense ministry statement said 13 Taliban insurgents were killed in southern Kandahar and 11 more were killed in northern Faryab in the last 24 hours.


Thousands of Afghan security forces and civilians have been killed since the February peace deal between the U.S. and the Taliban, according to data released by United Nations and the government.

This is news coming in via RDF/XML

InfoDesk

en

This message contains open source media content that has not been analyzed or edited by the Operations Center. 

Roles:

Everyone: All Users
NewsNavigation #NewsModule Afghanistan frees nearly 200 Taliban prisoners to push peace talks (Reuters)Generic Enhanced N
       <b>CROSSWALKS (This Advertisement shows 08 Related Records (From All Modules) - vertical column right (of record view)</b> (The Logic is Filtering by Region, Subject, Program and Glossary)Advertisers
#Set Active Nav - Content TypesAdvertisers
Form JS: Remove max-width on form elements & Autocomplete Off Date PickersAdvertisers
<b>Yellow Highlighting of Module Details View: Keyword Searched Value<b>Advertisers
U.S. State Department Design (CSS and related styles records)Styles S/GAC — U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator and Global Health DiplomacyAudience Advertisers Sponsored Keywords Splash Pages
visual editor / client console / x close editor
Module Designer
Children of this Page
Taxonomy
Dynamic Scripts
Advertising
Site Design & Layout