Taliban deny meeting UN envoy

By: Our Staff Reporter | January 31, 2010 |
KABUL (AFP) The Taliban denied Saturday that leaders of the group fighting to overthrow the Afghan government had met UN representatives to discuss bringing peace to Afghanistan.
The Taliban issued a statement branding reports of a meeting with the UNs outgoing special representative to Afghanistan, Kai Eide, in Dubai this month rumours and propaganda.
Referring to itself as the leading council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan - as it did during its 1996-2001 rule of the country - the group said the reports were propaganda by the invading forces against the jihad and Mujahideen.
The leading council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan strongly denies the rumours reported by some international media about talks between Kai Eide and representatives of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, the Taliban said.
To defuse this (propaganda) we insist on continuing our holy Islamic jihad against the enemy, it said, referring to the US and Nato forces fighting the Taliban insurgency.
The statement was read to AFP by purported Taliban spokesman Zabehullah Mujahed, speaking by phone from an undisclosed location.
He said the Talibans refusal to negotiate peace had ensured the failure of an international conference in London on Thursday attended by around 70 countries.
Now in an effort to recover their military and political prestige, the enemies are resorting to a propaganda conspiracy, he said.
Reports that Eide had met Taliban figures emerged after the London conference, which aimed to thrash out a road map for Afghanistan, one of the main themes being the social reintegration of Taliban fighters.
A UN official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said active members of the insurgency had met Eide in Dubai on January 8, at their request, to discuss peace talks.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband, who hosted the conference, declined Friday to comment on the reported meeting, calling it an allegation.
Eides spokesman in Kabul, Dan McNorton, said: The special representative never comments on meetings of this sort.
It is the Afghan government who are and will lead all efforts to bring peace to this country, he said, adding: As always the United Nations stands ready to assist in the process in any way that we can.
A Western diplomat, who asked not to be named, said it was not clear who was involved in the meeting as insurgent groups in different parts of the country fight under different banners.
In the south its Al-Qaeda or the Haqqani network or criminal gangs who dont fall under the Taliban, he said, referring to one of the major sticking points in forging a peace deal.
There is talk it could have been the Quetta shura, he said, referring to the leadership of the Afghan Taliban based across the border in Pakistan.

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