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Taliban Says Not Looking For 'Monopoly On Power' In Afghanistan


A view of the Taliban office in Doha, Qatar, where talks are being held with the top U.S. envoy.
A view of the Taliban office in Doha, Qatar, where talks are being held with the top U.S. envoy.

A spokesman for the Taliban, which now reportedly controls nearly half of Afghanistan, has said that the group is not seeking to rule Afghanistan alone in any future government structure and wants to co-exist with current institutions, according to the Associated Press news agency.

The statement by spokesman Suhail Shaheen on January 30 appears to be unusually conciliatory and was apparently aimed at easing concerns among Afghan leaders opposed to any peace deal that includes the insurgent group.

Shaheen, speaking in an audio message to AP, said the Taliban wanted to live alongside their countrymen "in an inclusive Afghan world."

The Taliban controlled the Afghan government before being driven from power in 2001 by a U.S.-led invasion after it refused to end support for Al-Qaeda terrorists following the September 11 terror attacks in the United States.

Taliban leaders, who took control in 1996, imposed a harsh form of Islamic law that denied education and work to women and girls as they cracked down on other social activities. They were accused by international groups of human rights violations.

Taliban militants are currently involved in negotiations in Qatar with Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation. The militant group has so far refused to deal with the government in Kabul and has insisted foreign troops must leave before it will agree to a peace settlement.

Both the Taliban and Khalilzad have said that progress has been made in the Qatar talks, and the U.S. envoy this week said that "agreements in principle" had been reached toward a framework for peace.

In his statement, Shaheen stated that the Taliban were not seeking a "monopoly on power" as part of their peace talks. Many observers said the remarks could provide Khalilzad greater leverage as he seeks to gain backing from Afghanistan's leadership for his peace efforts.

"After the end of the occupation, Afghans should forget their past and tolerate one another and start life like brothers. After the withdrawal [of foreign troops], we are not seeking a monopoly on power," said Shaheen, who is based in Qatar, where the Taliban has a political office.

Shaheen told AP that another round of talks with Khalilzad was scheduled for February 25 in Doha, the Qatari capital.

The developments come as a U.S. oversight agency reports that the Taliban expanded its territory in Afghanistan in 2018.

The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said on January 30 that the Kabul government now controls or influences about 54 percent of Afghan districts, down from 64 percent a year earlier.

The Taliban itself has been beset by internal divisions. Afghan officials last year reported that clashes between separate Taliban factions killed dozens of militants in the country's west.

With reporting by AP and dpa

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