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Afghanistan
Taleban reject Afghan government posts
2015-01-11
Kabul - The Afghan Taleban have turned down the offer of government posts made by the new dispensation in Kabul under President Ashraf Ghani. The offer came from new President Ghani in a bid to end the insurgency that threatens the recovery of the country, BBC reported.

More than three months after assuming office, President Ghani is still to announce the shape of his cabinet. The process has been delayed because of disagreements with President Ghani's partner and Chief Executive Officer, Abdullah Abdullah.

The president's spokesman has denied that the jobs were offered formally. But a source close to President Ghani said the government should be drawn "not just from the two teams, but from all parties in Afghanistan".

The three men whom President Ghani had hoped to draw into his government are Mullah Zaeef, the former Taleban ambassador to Pakistan who has lived relatively openly in Kabul for some years, Wakil Muttawakil, the former Taleban foreign minister and Ghairat Baheer, a close relative of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, whose forces are allied to the Taleban.

The ministerial posts earmarked for them were rural affairs, the borders, giving the Taleban responsibility for collecting customs, and the Hajj, the religious pilgrimage to Mecca.

There have also been negotiations over appointing Taleban governors in three southern provinces -- Nimruz, Kandahar and Helmand. This would have been the most contentious part of the deal for the international community. Most of the NATO casualties in Afghanistan were in efforts to keep the Taleban out of the south.

But the government's offer has now been turned down. A source close to the Taleban leadership said security deals signed by the new government allowing some international troops to remain in Afghanistan when combat troops left at the end of 2014 was the main stumbling block.

The Taleban also want changes in the constitution and immunity from prosecution before they enter into negotiations on joining the government.

The Taleban disagrees with deals allowing some NATO troops to remain in Afghanistan but the offer of posts shows that Ashraf Ghani is different from his predecessor Hamid Karzai -- willing to make bold and controversial gestures to secure change.

His supporters say that he has secured better cooperation with Pakistan to crack down on the Taleban inside their borders, and a number of Pakistani delegations have visited Kabul.

President Ghani has also called on China and Saudi Arabia to use their influence over Pakistan to improve relations.
Posted by:Steve White

#1  The Afghan Taleban have turned down the offer of government posts

The key difference btwn a Taleban and a democrat have now been established.

Snark of the day
Posted by: Besoeker   2015-01-11 07:16  

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