Afghan Taliban say their p
olitical representatives will attend a meeting in Russia on Tuesday that could provide them another opportunity to sit face-to-face with Afghan p
olitical leaders and diplomats to discuss peace in the war-torn country.
The Russian Foreign Ministry says a ceremonial meeting will be held in Moscow on May 28, marking the centenary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Russia and Afghanistan.
Representatives of the Russian public, the Embassy of Afghanistan in Russia and a number of Afghan p
olitical figures have been invited to the event, according to the spokesperson of the Russian Foreign Ministry. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will deliver a welcoming address.
Taliban p
olitical spokesman Suhail Shaheen said Taliban will attend the meeting.
Afghan media has reported that former Afghan President Hamid Karzai will be among several Afghan p
olitical leaders to attend the meeting that will also discuss peace in Afghanistan.
Nazar Mutmayeen, a participant of the February’s intra-Afghan conference in Moscow, told Daily Times on Sunday that a 20-member delegation from Kabul will attend Tuesday’
s meeting.
The Moscow meeting is seen to be important for providing another opportunity to the Afghan p
olitical leaders to sit with the Taliban p
olitical envoys and exchange views on the reconciliation.
Taliban leaders have so far refused to talk to the government of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, saying they do not consider the Kabul administration a party to the conflict and that they first want withdrawal of foreign forces.
Qatar last month postponed an intra-Afghan conference amid controversy over participants. Qatar and Taliban opposed a list of 250 personalities no
minated by the government. No date has been announced for the meeting. Taliban sources told Daily Times that the intra-Afghan conference will be held after the next round of Taliban-US talks.
Russia had also hosted the Taliban in February and senior Afghan p
oliticians that was a major step towards the intra-Afghan dialogue. The Afghan government had refused to send a delegation to the February meeting, which had supported Ta
liban’s demands for complete withdrawal of foreign forces, reopening of the Taliban office and listing sanctions on the Taliban leaders.
Russia wants a major role in Afghan reconciliation and also hosted Chinese and American special envoys for Afghanistan in April.
The trilateral meeting had called for an “orderly and responsible withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan as part of the overall peace process.”
Russia had been actively involved in the Afghan peace process since 2014 after the US and its NATO allies withdrew most of their troops. Besides promoting intra-Afghan meetings, Russia is also making efforts for regional consensus under the Moscow-format consultations. Pakistan is also an active member of the Moscow process.
Taliban officials say their participation in meetings is aimed at explaining their stance about the p
olitical solution to the Afghan problem. Taliban p
olitical office has increased interaction with countries as part of efforts to press for negotiated settlement of the conflict.
This month European Union Special Envoy for Afghanistan, Roland Kobia, and German Special Representative for Afghanistan, Markus Potzel, held talks with Taliban Deputy of P
olitical Affairs and Chief of P
olitical Office Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar and his team in Qatar.