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HPC: Peace Talks with Taliban ‘Next Week’
Afghanistan High Peace Council (HPC) on Wednesday said that Afghan government official negotiation with the Taliban group will begin next week.
Deputy of HPC said that the Talks will be carried out in China or one of the Arabic countries.
The statement came after that earlier Afghanistan’s most prominent peace envoy held secret talks with former Taliban officials in China, accelerating regional efforts to bring the insurgency to the negotiating table.
People familiar with the movement said the three Taliban who attended the China talks have strong ties to Pakistan’s spy agency, and that they aren’t authorized to speak on behalf on the insurgency about reconciliation.
“The Afghan government will start peace talks with the Taliban in the near future,” Abdul Hakim Mujahid, deputy of HPC said, adding that the government would keep the Afghan people informed of any progress in talks with the Taliban “from the beginning to the end of the process.”
Brokering a peace deal with the insurgents is a priority for Ghani, who took office in September.
The government of Afghanistan is close to beginning direct peace talks with Taliban insurgents.
HPC claims that Islamabad has the ability to persuade Taliban to end the war; a country that had never stood by its commitments against Afghanistan.
In 2013, the Taliban briefly opened a diplomatic office in the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Qatar after clandestine talks involving the United States and the European Union.
Angry that Afghans had been excluded, Karzai refused to participate and roundly criticized the effort, which quickly fell apart.
An Afghan official who has been in contact with the Taliban delegation in Qatar but was not authorized to speak to the news media, said one option being considered was to name a former Taliban official to lead the High Peace Council, the Afghan government body that liaises with the insurgency.
The top candidate is Motassim Agha Jan, a finance minister under the Taliban government that ruled Afghanistan in the late 1990s.
Motassim, the former chairman of the political committee of the Quetta Shura, the Taliban’s Pakistani-based top leadership, for years has called on the group to to engage in the political process.
The peace council, long seen as ineffective, has previously been led by former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani and his son Salahuddin, who were closely allied with slain former militia commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, one of the top leaders of the Afghan jihad against Taliban rule.
Taliban officials in Doha, Qatar’s capital, “said they can’t support [Motassim] publicly, but they also will not stand in the way,” the Afghan official said.
Some Afghan officials warn that the government must proceed with caution.
Afghan political analysts stressed that Islamabad had never been honest in its commitments but this time it should fulfill its promises.
Pakistan’s support is widely seen as critical for a peace process to work. Much of the Taliban leadership has been based in Pakistan since the regime was toppled in 2001, and its fighters have used the lawless border areas between the two countries as an operational base.
Afghan and Western officials have long accused Pakistan of effectively controlling the Taliban insurgency, an allegation Islamabad has repeatedly denied, even as it acknowledges it has some influence over the movement.
Since taking office, Ghani has rolled out a complex strategy aimed at forcing the Taliban leadership to accept that their cause — replacing his government with an Islamist emirate — is hopeless. He has enlisted the support of regional countries believed to protect, fund and arm the Taliban, including Pakistan.
Reported by Fawad Naseri
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5.8-magnitude earthquake shakes parts of Afghanistan
A strong earthquake measuring 5.8 on the Richter scale struck parts of Afghanistan on Friday night, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS).
The epicenter was reported in Jurm district of Badakhshan province, with a depth of 186 kilometers.
There have been no immediate reports of casualties or damage.
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China says Afghanistan–Pakistan peace talks show progress
China has positioned itself as a facilitator, aiming to create conditions for dialogue and provide a platform for negotiations.
Negotiations between Afghanistan and Pakistan are making steady progress, China said on Friday, as efforts continue to ease tensions in their most serious conflict since the return of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan in 2021.
Speaking at a regular press briefing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said both sides had welcomed Beijing’s mediation and were willing to resume dialogue. “This is a positive development,” she said, noting that China remains in close communication with both governments.
Beijing— which shares a border with both countries—has stepped up diplomatic engagement in recent months, including calls with foreign ministers and a visit by a special envoy in March. Previous rounds of talks have reportedly taken place in Urumqi, though officials did not confirm the latest venue.
China has positioned itself as a facilitator, aiming to create conditions for dialogue and provide a platform for negotiations. Mao said further details would be released jointly by the three countries “in due course.”
Clashes between Afghan and Pakistani forces since October have killed dozens on both sides, with Afghan civilians bearing the brunt of the violence. Islamabad has accused Kabul of harboring militants responsible for cross-border attacks—an allegation Afghan authorities deny, calling militancy a domestic issue for Pakistan.
The renewed diplomatic push signals cautious optimism that tensions between the neighbors could ease through sustained dialogue under Chinese mediation.
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Afghan doctors urged to support Iranian health institutions amid US and Israeli attacks
This appeal aims to emphasize the protection of healthcare facilities and the safeguarding of human health during times of war and crisis.
The Embassy of Iran in Afghanistan, citing Masoud Pezeshkian, President of Iran, has called on doctors worldwide to respond to recent attacks on hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and medical research institutions in Iran by U.S. and Israeli forces.
The embassy specifically urged Afghan doctors and healthcare staff to support Pezeshkian’s appeal and, in coordination with international organizations, raise the voice of the medical community against what has been described as a blatant attack on humanity.
This appeal aims to emphasize the protection of healthcare facilities and the safeguarding of human health during times of war and crisis.
So far, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has not issued any official response regarding this appeal.
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