Taliban ‘will not work with US to contain Islamic State’

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Taliban ‘Will Not Work With Us To Contain Islamic State’
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By Kathy Gannon and Ellen Knickmeyer, AP

The Taliban have ruled out cooperation with the US to contain extremist groups in Afghanistan.

The group has staked out its uncompromising position on a key issue ahead of the first direct talks between the former foes since America withdrew from the country in August.

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Senior Taliban officials and US representatives are to meet over Saturday and Sunday in Doha, the capital of the Persian Gulf state of Qatar.

Officials from both sides have said issues to be tackled include reining in extremist groups and the evacuation of foreign citizens and Afghans from the country.

The Taliban have signalled their flexibility on evacuations.


Taliban fighter
A Taliban fighter walks into a police station in Kabul (AP)

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Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen told The Associated Press there would be no cooperation with Washington on going after the increasingly active Islamic State (IS) group affiliate in Afghanistan.

IS has taken responsibility for a number of attacks, including a suicide bombing that killed 46 minority Shia Muslims and wounded dozens of others as they prayed in a mosque.

“We are able to tackle Daesh (another term for IS) independently,” Mr Shaheen said, when asked whether the Taliban would work with the US to contain the IS affiliate.

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IS has carried out relentless assaults on the country’s Shia Muslims since emerging in eastern Afghanistan in 2014. IS is also seen as the greatest threat at present to the United States.

The weekend meetings in Doha are the first since US forces withdrew from Afghanistan in late August, ending a 20-year military presence, and the Taliban rose to power in the nation. The US has made it clear the talks are not a preamble to recognition.

The talks also come on the heels of two days of difficult discussions between Pakistani officials and US deputy secretary of state Wendy Sherman in Islamabad.


Wendy Sherman
US deputy secretary of state Wendy Sherman (AP)

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The focus of those talks was also Afghanistan. Pakistani officials urged the US to engage with Afghanistan’s new rulers and release billions of dollars in international funds to stave off an economic meltdown.

Pakistan also had a message for the Taliban, urging them to become more inclusive and pay attention to human rights and its minority ethnic and religious groups.

Afghanistan’s Shia clerics assailed the Taliban rulers following Friday’s attack, demanding greater protection at their places of worship.

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The IS affiliate claimed responsibility and identified the bomber as an Uighur Muslim.

The militants said the attack targeted both Shias and the Taliban for their purported willingness to expel Uighurs to meet demands from China. It was the deadliest attack since foreign troops left Afghanistan at the end of August.

Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Programme at the US-based Wilson Centre, said Friday’s attack could be a harbinger of more violence.


Most of the Uighur militants belong to the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, which has found a safe haven in the border regions of Pakistan and Afghanistan for decades.

“If the (IS) claim is true, China’s concerns about terrorism in (Afghanistan)—to which the Taliban claims to be receptive—will increase,” he tweeted following the attack

Both Afghanistan and Pakistan want the anticipated economic benefits from China’s multi-billion Belt and Road initiative project linking Beijing to Central and South Asia.

They have been willing to ignore China’s persecution of its Muslim Uighur population.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid last month called the Chinese project the region’s most important economic venture.

During the Doha talks, US officials will also seek to hold Taliban leaders to commitments that they would allow Americans and other foreign nationals to leave Afghanistan, along with Afghans who once worked for the US military or government and other Afghan allies, a US official said.

The Biden administration has fielded questions and complaints about the slow pace of US-facilitated evacuations from Taliban-ruled Afghanistan since the US withdrawal.

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