Karzai offers talks with Taleban to end bloodshed
KABUL - Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Monday offered peace talks with a resurgent Taleban after the bloodiest year since the hardline Islamists were ousted in 2001 and amid warnings of a violent spring offensive.
More than 4,000 people, including about 170 foreign soldiers, died in fighting last year, a year that saw a dramatic jump in suicide bombings as the Taleban and other militants copy tactics from insurgents in Iraq.
Karzai made the offer while speaking at a religious gathering in Kabul on one of the holiest days of the Shia Islamic calendar, but he did not specifically name the Taleban.
“While we are fighting for our honour, we still open the door for talks and negotiations with our enemy who is after our annihilation and is shedding our blood,” he told the crowd at the main Shia religious compound in the capital.
Karzai also said he prayed for the “guidance” of those who plotted against Afghanistan, referring to neighbouring Pakistan where the Taleban and their Islamic allies have sanctuaries.
Karzai two years ago offered amnesty to those Taleban he and others regard as moderate, but on Monday made no such distinction.
No senior Taleban commander or leader has surrendered or joined the government as part of past efforts to bring them into the mainstream and senior rebel leaders have ridiculed such calls as a sign of weakness.
The Taleban have vowed to drive out foreign troops and overthrow Karzai and his government.
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1) Karzai offers talks with Taleban to end bloodshed
Monday, January 29, 2007
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