Sunday, June 28, 2026
ADVT 
International

Afghan Peace Talks: Taliban Agrees To Reduce Violence

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Jul, 2019 09:16 PM

    The Taliban has agreed to reduce violence by stopping attacks on "religious centres, schools, hospitals, educational centres, bazaars, water dams and workplaces" in Afghanistan, that could expedite the end of the 18-year war in the war-torn nation, the media reported on Tuesday.


    The agreement taken at the Intra-Afghan Dialogue Conference on Peace in Doha on Monday night came in the form of a resolution prepared by a committee of six members from Kabul and three members from the Taliban, reports TOLO News.


    The participants from Kabul from politicians, civil society members, and government officials. They attended the intra-Afghan talks with their personal capacity.


    The resolution also called for an end to civilian casualties and the protection of women's rights within an "Islamic framework".


    Meanwhile, Mutlaq bin Majid Al Qahtani, the Special Envoy of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Qatar, hailed the success of intra-Afghan dialogue in Doha as the first step into the "journey of a thousand miles", Khaama Press reported.


    Qahtani said the resolution might be a first step to find an understanding between the conflicting parties.


    He hoped that this event would mark the beginning of a meaningful process leading to a comprehensive and sustainable peace in Afghanistan.


    The non-binding agreement comes as the seventh round of talks between American negotiators and the insurgents is expected to resume later on Tuesday.


    The two-sides hope to reach an agreement that would see US troops withdraw in return for a commitment that Afghanistan would not be used as a terror base.


    The Taliban has refused to hold direct negotiations with the Afghan government until the US announces a timetable for the withdrawal.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    In Suspected Hate Crime, Muslim Woman In Headscarf Stabbed To Death In US

    In Suspected Hate Crime, Muslim Woman In Headscarf Stabbed To Death In US
    Nazma Khanam, a former schoolteacher, was on her way home along with her husband Shamsul Alam Khan, 75, after closing their shop and picking up some groceries when she was attacked.

    In Suspected Hate Crime, Muslim Woman In Headscarf Stabbed To Death In US

    Hillary Clinton Leads Donald Trump By 7 Points In One Poll, Trails In Another

    Hillary Clinton Leads Donald Trump By 7 Points In One Poll, Trails In Another
    A Suffolk University/USA Today poll of voters likely to cast ballots in the November presidential election, put Clinton 7 points above Trump nationwide.

    Hillary Clinton Leads Donald Trump By 7 Points In One Poll, Trails In Another

    Trudeau To Visit Alibaba For Launch Of Online Hub In China For Canadian Firms

    Trudeau To Visit Alibaba For Launch Of Online Hub In China For Canadian Firms
    SHANGHAI — Canadian merchants are expected to soon have their own online storefront to sell their goods to the vast Chinese marketplace via the e-commerce giant Alibaba.

    Trudeau To Visit Alibaba For Launch Of Online Hub In China For Canadian Firms

    Overwhelming Majority Of Britons Favour Banning Burqa

    Overwhelming Majority Of Britons Favour Banning Burqa
    Britons favour banning of the Islamic veil or burqa by an overwhelming majority of more than two-to-one, a recent UK poll, commissioned in the aftermath of banning of burkini swimwear on a number of French beaches, has found.

    Overwhelming Majority Of Britons Favour Banning Burqa

    US Airliner Puts 5-Year-Old On Wrong Plane, Lands In Boston

    US Airliner Puts 5-Year-Old On Wrong Plane, Lands In Boston
    Mother of a 5-year-old boy in New York has said her son was put on a wrong flight by JetBlue when he was traveling alone from the Dominican Republic and that she was presented with a wrong child by the US airliner.

    US Airliner Puts 5-Year-Old On Wrong Plane, Lands In Boston

    Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert

    Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert
    VANCOUVER — Canada's plans to restrict six chemicals used to make fentanyl will only increase demands for a more dangerous replacement if other steps to stem a national opioid crisis are not taken, a drug-policy expert says. 

    Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert