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Afghan-Taliban Peace Talks to be held less than a month

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Last Updated on: October 25, 2022

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It is scheduled that official negotiation between Afghanistan and Taliban to be held less than a month, Pakistani media outlets said.

Pakistani media outlets as military officials quoted say that the negotiations will be held in the second week of the year 2016 January and Hanif Atmar, National Security Adviser of President Ghani will be the representative of Afghanistan in a significant effort to open formal peace negotiations.

The media outlets of Pakistan noted that the negotiations will be held between Hanif Atmar, Afghanistan national security adviser, Pakistan Prime Minister, Sartaj Aziz and Taliban with monitoring of US and China’s special representatives.

Meanwhile, President adviser called on Pakistan to be honest on its commitments.

“Our demand from Pakistan is to be honest on their commitments to our country,” said Qutbuddin Helal, President’s adviser.

Ariananews tried to have Presidential Palace and National Security Council’s comments regarding the issue but failed to succeed.

“I do not believe on Pakistan’s commitments and still there is no signs of honesty about this country,” said Jawid Kohestani, military analyst.

Afghan and Taliban representatives met each other after landmark through-the-night talks aimed at ending the militants’ 13-year insurgency in the town of Murree, a hill station north of Islamabad.

Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif hailed the meeting as a breakthrough, though the Taliban showed no sign of easing up on their bloody offensive, launching suicide attacks in Kabul as talks were about to get under way.

The Islamabad meeting, brokered by Pakistani officials after months of intense effort by President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan to get them more centrally involved in the peace process, was the most promising contact between the two warring sides in years.
A peace process that would lead to the Taliban ending their insurgency has long been seen as a crucial part of the American strategy to stabilize Afghanistan after a costly 14-year war.

But previous promising moments in that effort, including the formal opening of a Taliban political office in Qatar in 2013, either fizzled or backfired.

In their first meet-up in the popular tourist resort of Murree on July 7, Afghan government officials had demanded that the Taliban announce a ceasefire.

The insurgents agreed to cease fire if Pakistan and China guaranteed a ‘United National Government’ would be formed in Afghanistan.

It is believed that both Islamabad and Beijing are willing to go the extra mile if all sides signal their inclination for such a role.

Since the first round of talks, Afghan government officials and Taliban cadres were said to have been in contact to work out some CBMs for the next round in order to make the atmosphere conducive for more meaningful talks.

The Murree Peace Process is the first serious effort in recent years to cut a peace deal between the Afghan government and Taliban insurgents. All sides have been able to sit on the negotiating table after Pakistan successfully persuaded the Taliban to join peace talks.

 

 

 

 

 

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UK considers talks with IEA over deporting Afghan asylum seekers

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The UK is considering potential talks with the Islamic Emirate on deporting failed Afghan asylum seekers, marking a possible shift in policy.

UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said the government is “closely monitoring” discussions by other countries, including European partners, but stressed that no final decision has been made and the option remains open.

Afghans were the most common nationality arriving in the UK by small boats in the year ending June 2025, with 6,360 arrivals—an 18% increase from the previous year. Between 2022 and 2024, nearly 30,000 Afghans applied for asylum in the UK.

However, the UK does not officially recognize the Islamic Emirate, creating a major barrier to any deportation agreement.

Shabana said: “We’re monitoring very closely what is happening in terms of other countries, whether that’s European partners or others, and conversations they are having with other countries, including Afghanistan.

“I’m not going to get into any additional discussions that are happening in government – we’ll have more to say about that in the future – but of course we monitor closely and we work with our partners in terms of the efforts that we all need to make collectively to try to get agreements.

“I’m not ruling it in or out. I’m not going to give a running commentary on additional conversations that are happening.”

 

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Afghanistan-Pakistan talks in Urumqi were positive: Muttaqi

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Islamic Emirate Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi has said the recent talks between Afghanistan and Pakistan in Urumqi, China, have had positive results.

At the graduation ceremony of the Institute of Diplomacy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he called on politicians, scholars, professors, writers and media activists to deal with sensitive issues between the two neighboring and Islamic countries with “responsibility” and refrain from publishing irresponsible content.

Muttaqi stressed that diplomacy should be based on ethics and Sharia principles, adding that some youths publish content that could harm the country without knowing the consequences.

He also said there was no armed opposition movement across Afghanistan and no reports of attacks on checkpoints or capture of areas by the opposition.

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Kabul responds to reports of possible relocation of Afghans from Qatar to Congo by U.S.

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The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Afghanistan has responded to media reports suggesting that around 1,100 Afghans awaiting U.S. visa processing in Qatar may be relocated to the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

In a statement on Saturday, the ministry’s spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi said it had taken note of reports indicating that Afghan nationals in Qatar were being asked to choose between returning to Afghanistan or being transferred to a third country.

The ministry reiterated that Afghanistan is the shared homeland of all Afghans and encouraged voluntary return, stressing that returnees can come back with “full confidence and peace of mind.”

It said that those intending to travel to another country may do so at an appropriate juncture through legal and dignified channels.

The statement added that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is ready to engage with all countries through consular and bilateral channels to protect the rights of Afghan citizens abroad.

It further stated that there are no security threats inside Afghanistan, rejecting the notion that citizens are being forced to leave for other countries due to conditions at home.

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