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Afghan Taliban unaware of invitation to peace talks: spokesman
by Staff Writers
Kabul (AFP) Feb 24, 2016


Russia gives Afghanistan 10,000 Kalashnikovs
Kabul (AFP) Feb 24, 2016 - Russia delivered 10,000 Kalashnikovs to the Afghan government Wednesday, with officials saying they were for the fight "against terrorism", a day after Kabul hosted talks on reviving the peace process with the Taliban.

The assault rifles, delivered with pomp at a ceremony on the tarmac at Kabul's military airport, will be directly transferred to security forces, said President Ashraf Ghani's national security adviser Hanif Atmar.

"We are trying to continue our efforts for peace, but in the meantime our nation should have the ability to defend itself," Atmar said.

He said "international terrorism" in Afghanistan was a threat not only to the country and the region, but also to "our friends in Russia".

Despite the $60 billion spent by Washington over more than 14 years to equip and train the Afghan security forces, they have struggled to contain the resurgent Taliban.

Kabul is trying to resume a dialogue with the militants, and after talks with the US, China and Pakistan on Tuesday said it expects to relaunch the stalled peace process by early March.

Russia is not part of the quartet. In a recent interview with state news agency Ria Novosti, Zamir Kabulov, the Kremlin's special representative to Afghanistan, described Washington's efforts to restore peace as "futile".

At Wednesday's ceremony Russia's ambassador in Kabul Alexander Mantitski said cooperation between his country, NATO and the United States in Afghanistan ended in April 2014 "at the initiative of the West".

The decision was taken in retaliation for Russia's annexation of Crimea.

However the diplomat said Moscow would continue to cooperate directly with its Afghan partner.

Russia remains concerned about the growing influence of Islamic State in the east of the country, where the group counts fighters from Uzbekistan and Tajikistan -- two former Soviet republics bordering Afghanistan -- in its ranks.

The Afghan Taliban said Wednesday they had not been officially contacted by Kabul about the resumption of direct talks aimed at ending their conflict.

The comment came a day after the latest round of dialogue in the Afghan capital between officials from Afghanistan, the United States, China and Pakistan.

The representatives of the four states called on the militants to return to the negotiating table and said they expect the process to begin by the first week of March.

"We are not aware of this, I cannot say anything regarding talks in Islamabad," said the Islamist group's spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid in a phone conversation.

"We have not received anything officially in this regard, we only heard it from media."

A first round of direct talks with the Taliban took place in the Pakistani resort town of Murree last July, but came to a standstill after the Kabul government leaked news of the death of Taliban leader Mullah Omar two years before.

The announcement, and the appointment of his successor Mullah Akhtar Mansour, accentuated divisions among the militants, with many holding Mansour responsible for lying to them about Omar's death.

A splinter group formed under Mullah Rasool and challenged Mansour's leadership.

But the disunity has not dented the Taliban's fighting ability.

The insurgents are waging an unprecedented winter campaign of violence across Afghanistan, underscoring a worsening security situation more than 14 years after their government in Kabul was toppled by a US-led invasion.

In January, during a seminar organised by the Pugwash peace movement in Qatar, Taliban representatives called for their cadres to be removed from US and UN blacklists which have frozen their assets and restricted their freedom of movement.

In addition, they have said talks cannot take place until the withdrawal of some 13,000 NATO troops still deployed in Afghanistan.

"We have expressed our position clearly in the Pugwash conference," Mujahid told AFP.


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THE STANS
Afghan forces retreat from districts in strategic Helmand
Kandahar, Afghanistan (AFP) Feb 22, 2016
Afghan troops have retreated from two districts in the southern province of Helmand, officials said Monday, a move which highlights the challenge from Taliban fighters in the opium-producing region. "The Afghan army retreated from two army bases in Musa Qala and one base from Nawzad district" on Saturday, provincial governor Khan Rahimi told AFP, leaving no troops anywhere in those districts ... read more


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