Monday, November 17, 2008

Afghan Resistance Rejects Offer of Talks Absent of US/NATO Withdrawal

Monday, November 17, 2008
20:50 Mecca time, 17:50 GMT

Taliban rejects Karzai's offer

Mullah Omar, who is wanted by the US, has a $10 million reward on his head

Mullah Omar, the elusive leader of the anti-government Taliban, appears to have rejected an offer from Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, of protection in exchange for peace talks.

A Taliban spokesman rejected on Monday the offer of safe passage and reiterated that foreign troops had to leave before negotiations could start.

"As long as foreign occupiers remain in Afghanistan, we aren't ready for talks because they hold the power and talks won't bear fruit," Mullah Brother, the purported deputy leader of the Taliban, told the Reuters news agency by satellite telephone from an undisclosed location.

"We are safe in Afghanistan and we have no need for Hamid Karzai's offer of safety".

Brother said the Taliban jihad, or holy war, will continue.

The Taliban has ruled out any talks as long as foreign troops remain in Afghanistan.

Karzai said on Sunday that condition was "unacceptable".

War-weary electorate

Analysts say Karzai's safe-passage offer is not so much in the expectation that Omar would take up the offer, but to emphasise his message to other Taliban.

Karzai also hopes to win a presidential election next year and wants to be seen by a war-weary electorate as making every effort to bring peace, analysts say.

At least 70,000 foreign troops, around half of them American, are struggling against the Taliban, whose influence and attacks are spreading in the south, east and west.

Barack Obama, the US president-elect, has suggested that he is open to holding talks with more moderate Taliban leaders to explore whether the Iraq strategy would work in Afghanistan.

A tentative first step towards talks was taken in September when a group of pro-government Afghan officials and former Taliban officials met in Saudi Arabia for discussions on how to end the conflict.

But the Taliban derided those talks and repeated their demand that foreign troops leave Afghanistan.

However, Afghan government officials have said they expected another round of talks to be held.

On the ground, there has been no let-up in violence. A roadside bomb aimed at Afghan soldiers in Panjwayi, a district in the southern province of Kandahar, killed four civilians, while a suicide bomb attack in the same region killed three other people, an official said.

The attack on the Afghan army patrol lightly damaged their vehicle, and instead hit a nearby group of civilians, Zalmai Ayubi, the Kandahar governor's spokesman, said.

Four civilians were killed and eight others were wounded in the explosion, Ayubi said. He accused the Taliban of planting the bomb.

Kandahar bombing

In the second attack in Kandahar, two police officers and a civilian died when a suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance of a government office in the district of Dand, Ayubi said.

Three other police were wounded when officers tried to stop the bomber from entering the offices of the district chief, he said.

The Kandahar governor's office told Al Jazeera that the attacker had disguised himself in a police uniform and attempted to enter the district chief's office.

He was shot by police but was still able to detonate his explosives.

The previous day, a suicide attacker killed two Afghan civilians and wounded two German soldiers serving with Nato in the northern province of Baghlan.

Two US soldiers were injured on the same day in a bomb attack on the outskirts of the western city of Herat, the US military said.

Source: Agencies

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