Taliban demand new constitution in rare Moscow talks

Published February 6, 2019
MOSCOW: (Left) Participants attend the opening of two-day talks between the Taliban and Afghan opposition representatives at the President Hotel on Tuesday. Taliban spokesman Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai (top right) greets a participant during the talks. Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai (bottom right) in conversation with a delegate.—AFP
MOSCOW: (Left) Participants attend the opening of two-day talks between the Taliban and Afghan opposition representatives at the President Hotel on Tuesday. Taliban spokesman Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai (top right) greets a participant during the talks. Former Afghan president Hamid Karzai (bottom right) in conversation with a delegate.—AFP

MOSCOW: An extraordinary meeting between the Taliban and some high-ranking Afghan politicians, excluding Kabul government’s representatives, was held here on Tuesday in which the former demanded a new constitution for Afghanistan and promised an “inclusive Islamic system” to govern the war-torn country.

In the meeting, rivals of President Ashraf Ghani called for an interim government in Afghanistan.

The unprecedented gathering saw the Taliban outline their vision for Afghanistan, including rules around women and the adoption of an Islamic constitution, in televised talks before heavyweights, including former president Hamid Karzai.

In extraordinary scenes, group’s leaders listen as women defend their rights

The Taliban led prayers and dined with the leaders, some sworn enemies, before sitting down for their most significant engagement with the Afghan politicians in recent memory.

The roundtable, which saw women defend their rights before the Taliban, comes a week after the insurgents held talks with United States negotiators in Doha about ending the 17-year war.

Both sides touted “progress” at the conclusion of the six-day discussions in Qatar.

The Doha and Moscow talks, though entirely separate, both excluded the government in Kabul, where Mr Ghani has expressed anger at being increasingly sidelined from key peace negotiations.

But many of his chief opponents, including some contesting presidential elections in July, were present in the Russian capital and some called for the formation of an interim government to include the Taliban.

“The interim government should also pave the way for a transparent election... so that the political factions, including the Taliban, take part in the process with peace of mind,” Atta Muhammad Noor, an influential former warlord who was invited to Moscow, said on Twitter.

It could act as “transition path... through this fragile and messy situation” and convince the insurgents to take part in the political process, he added.

The Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan under a ruthless interpretation of Sharia law between 1996 and 2001, said they did not want a “monopoly of power” but “an inclusive Islamic system”.

But they have refused thus far to talk to Mr Ghani despite his offers for talks, calling his administration a US puppet.

“There’s something surreal about Afghanistan’s most powerful opposition politicians meeting with the Taliban in order to spark an intra-Afghan dialogue that doesn’t include the country’s own government,” said analyst Michael Kugelman of the Wilson Centre in Washington.

Mr Ghani’s allies in Washington insist Afghans should lead the peace process, and the months-long push by Washington to engage the Taliban has ostensibly been aimed at convincing them to negotiate with Kabul.

He has repeatedly said that all Afghans should agree on the need to end hostilities and an eventual withdrawal of foreign forces, but that he would not “surrender to a temporary peace deal”.

‘Obstacle to peace’

In extraordinary scenes, the Taliban listened as women addressed the Moscow roundtable — an unthinkable prospect under their regime, which was toppled by US-led forces in 2001.

The insurgents indicated they could loosen some guidelines around women — in line with Sharia law — extending even to female representation in parliament.

Fawzia Koofi, one of two women invited to Moscow, said the Islamist militants would “have to adapt to a modern Afghanistan”.

“When they were in power, they would not even let women leave their homes,” Ms Koofi, the head of Afghanistan’s parliamentary Committee on Women and Human Rights, told AFP.

“But now we’re hearing women could be prime minister or a minister. It’s a change I think. It’s a positive step but not enough.” But the group stopped short of agreeing to a female president, she added.

Under their rule, the Taliban severely curtailed women’s liberties, barring them from work and school, and confined women to their homes — only allowing them outside with a male escort and hidden beneath a burqa.

The Taliban also elaborated on their vision for Afghanistan, including the replacement of the constitution with one crafted by Islamic scholars.

“The Kabul government constitution is invalid. It has been imported from the West and is an obstacle to peace,” said Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, who headed the Taliban delegation.

The group also promised to stamp out poppy cultivation and take steps to prevent civilian casualties in a conflict that has killed and wounded hundreds of thousands.

Jarring images of Mr Karzai, a US-appointed president, and other leaders joining Taliban officials in prayer and breaking bread in Russia sparked some anger back home.

“If you guys can eat together, laugh and pray together, hug each other why you are still killing innocent Afghans?” one Facebook user posted.

The two-day Moscow talks conclude Wednesday. The Taliban are scheduled to hold a separate, second round of peace talks with the US in Doha on February 25.

Published in Dawn, February 6th, 2019

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