US-Taliban peace talks paused for first day of Ramadan
Peace talks between the US and the Taliban were suspended for the beginning of Ramadan on Monday, with the two sides at apparent loggerheads over the key issue of when foreign forces might leave Afghanistan.
The foes have spent much of the past week in a sixth round of talks in Doha aimed at ending America's longest running foreign war, but the Taliban say negotiations have become bogged down.
In a tweet, Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen said the talks were pausing for the first day of the holy month of Ramadan - when Muslims fast during the daylight hours - but would be resumed Tuesday.
Sultan Barakat, the director of the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies in Doha, also said the talks would resume Tuesday, and that they had made "good progress".
But Shaheen told AFP late Sunday negotiations were stumbling over the fundamental question of when foreign forces would depart Afghanistan.
Before the US agrees to any withdrawal, it is demanding the Taliban put in place security guarantees, a ceasefire and other commitments including an "intra-Afghan" dialogue with the Kabul government and other Afghan representatives.
The insurgents insist they won't do any of these things until the US announces a withdrawal timeline.
Ceasefire offer
At the end of a large peace summit in Kabul last week, President Ashraf Ghani offered the Taliban a ceasefire to begin on the first day of Ramadan, but the insurgents refused.
Ghani on Monday reiterated his call for the Taliban to respect demands from last week's "loya jirga" summit.
"Ramadan is a month of peace and reconciliation," Ghani said.
"I once again call on the Taliban to pay respect to this month and the demands of the people for peace and reconciliation reflected (in the Loya Jirga)."
The historic "lora jirga" peace summit saw about 3,200 religious and tribal leaders, politicians and representatives meet in Kabul to try to find a breakthrough in Afghanistan's gruelling conflict, which is now in its 18th year.
The insurgent group has so far refused to even speak with Ghani, who they view as an American stooge.
However, last year the Taliban announced a three-day ceasefire at the end of Ramadan after Ghani declared a unilateral ceasefire for eight days earlier in the month.
It was first formal nationwide ceasefire since the US-led invasion of 2001 and saw unprecedented scenes of reconciliation and jubilation in Kabul and across the country.
On Sunday, at least 13 people were killed and dozens more wounded after a Taliban suicide bomber and several gunmen attacked a police headquarters in northern Afghanistan.
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