The Afghan Taliban on Sunday rejected as rumors media reports about a meeting between several high ranking officials of the insurgent movement and Americans in Bagram.
In a statement, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said Tal
iban has an internationally recognised political office for diplomatic activities in Qatar, and every country including America is able to freely contact and visit them.
“No member of the Islamic Emirate nor any delegation has met anyone in Bagram,” Mujahid said. He also denied reports that the Taliban officials met with the Americans in Dubai.
“It is entirely possible that some self-interested individuals – for financial and other motives – could have tried to fool the Americans with such actions and posed as representatives of the Islamic Emirate to the Americans who have fallen for similar traps multiple times. But the reality remains that all our diplomatic contacts shall be conducted through the Political Office and known addresses,” he said.
Separately, the Tal
iban have written a letter to several Pakistani ulema, urging them to not join an upcoming joint conf
erence of ulema from both countries to evolve a consensus approach regarding the war in Afghanistan.
Though no date has yet been decided for the conf
erence, however, during his Kabul visit this month, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi had agreed on a meeting of a steering committee of the Joint Ulema Conf
erence to be held in Islamabad to make preparations for the conf
erence.
Pakistani and Afghan sources have told Daily Times that both sides had be
en involved in discussions to hold the conf
erence, however, the Taliban attack in Ghazni affected the process.
Official sources, aware of the consultations for the conf
erence, say that Afghan scholars will suggest names of ulema they believe hold influence over the Taliban for the me
eting. Afghanistan believes Pakistani ulema can play a useful role in encouraging the Taliban to end violence and join peace process. Earlier, such conf
erences have been held in Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and Kabul, where declarations were issued against violence in Afghanistan. Several Pakistani clerics boycoted the Saudi conf
erence on Taliban’s urging. The 15-member Pakistani delegation that attended the Indonesian conf
erence persuaded the organisers to not specify the Taliban’s name in the joint declaration.
Besides, nearly 2000 Pakistani ulema issued an edict against suicide bombings in Pakistan this January. Afghan president Ashraf Ghani had responded to the edict, titled “Paigham-e-Pakistan”, by pointing out that it did not mention the Taliban fighting in Afghanistan.
In the letter dated Muharram 11 (September 22), the Tal
iban has urged Pakistani clerics to ‘avoid participation in such conf
erences as the U.S. wants to weaken the ongoing holy war through conf
erences of the scholars’.
The Taliban’s letter says the U
S wants to make Afghanistan as its ‘subservient’ state and to establish military and intelligence bases to use Afghanistan’s strategic location for its objectives and weaken the Muslim world. “If the U.S. succeeds in this sinister designs there is no doubt it will increase difficulties for Pakistan, India, Central Asia, and Arab countries,” the letter reads.
Published in Daily Times, September 24th 2018.