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Arrests in Pakistan “Negatively Affected” UN talks with Taliban: Ex-UN Envoy

Al-Manar   | 19 – 03 – 2010

The latest arrest “campaign” of key Taliban leaders in Pakistan stopped a secret channel of communications between the movement and the United Nations, the former UN special representative to Afghanistan said Friday.

He was referring to the arrest of senior Taliban commanders in Pakistan in recent weeks, a move which had been welcomed in the United States as a “sign of the country’s increasing willingness to track down Afghan militant leaders.”

In an interview with the BBC, Kai Eide, confirmed for the first time that he had been holding talks with senior Taliban figures and said they started around a year ago. The diplomat, who stepped down from the post earlier this month, said that Face-to-face talks were held with “senior figures in the Taliban leadership” in Dubai and other locations.

“Of course I met Taliban leaders during the time I was in Afghanistan,” the Norwegian diplomat told the broadcaster at his home outside Oslo.

Asked about the level of contact in the talks, Eide told the BBC: “We met senior figures in the Taliban leadership and we also met people who have the authority of the Quetta Shura to engage in that kind of discussion.” The Quetta Shura is the name given to the Taliban leadership council, which takes its name from the Pakistani city of Quetta where the senior members of the militia are thought to have been based.

Eide said these contacts were “in the early stages… talks about talks”, adding it would take a long time before there was enough confidence between both sides to really move forward.

Asked whether the leader of the Taliban movement Mullah Omar would have known about the talks, he said: “I find it unthinkable that such contact would take place without his knowledge and also without his acceptance.”

“The first contact was probably last spring, and then of course you moved into the election process where there was a lull in activity.”

Eide said that “communication picked up when the election process was over, and it continued to pick up until a certain moment a few weeks ago.”

The diplomat said the detentions had a “negative” effect on attempts to find a political solution to the eight-year-old Afghan war.

“The effect of (the arrests), in total, certainly, was negative on our possibilities to continue the political process that we saw as so necessary at that particular juncture,” he said.

He also slammed the Pakistani role suggesting that it had deliberately tried to undermine the negotiations. “The Pakistanis did not play the role they should have played. They must have known about this,” said Eide.

“I don’t believe these people were arrested by coincidence. They must have known who they were, what kind of role they were playing — and you see the result today.”

Pakistani officials have insisted the arrests were not aimed at wrecking the talks, the BBC reported.

He added there were now many channels of communication with the Taliban, including with representatives of Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

Taliban military commander Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar was captured last month in the southern Pakastani city of Karachi, in what US media said was a joint operation with American spies. Other senior Taliban commanders have also reportedly been captured in Pakistan recently.

Reports first emerged that Eide met Taliban figures after an international conference on Afghanistan in London in January.

March 19, 2010 - Posted by | Militarism

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