AFGHANISTAN’S top official in negotiations with the Taliban arrived in Pakistan’s capital yesterday on a three-day trip during which he will meet with the country’s prime minister and other government officials. Abdullah Abdullah, who leads the Afghan High Council for National Reconciliation, was received by top government officials on arriving in Islamabad. Apart from meeting with Prime Minister Imran Khan, the Afghan reconciliation leader also will meet with President Arif Alvi, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and other officials. The council represents the Afghan Government in historic peace negotiations with the Taliban, which began in Qatar on Sept. 12. Those talks represent the most-serious effort yet at ending decades of war in Afghanistan that followed the 2001 U.S.-led invasion that toppled its Taliban government, which was then hosting al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden who planned the Sept. 11 attacks. The Afghan-Taliban talks come after a deal signed in February between the U.S. and the Taliban. That aims to allow the U.S. to withdraw from Afghanistan and end the longest military engagement in American history. Many Taliban leaders have lived in Pakistan since the 1980s. In those years they were part of the Afghan mujahedeen, allies of the U.S. in ending the 10-year occupation of the country by the Soviet Union. Pakistan has denied giving sanctuary to Taliban members following their ouster in 2001. (SD-Agencies) |