Hundreds more Taleban prisoners freed on last day of Afghan ceasefire

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Hundreds, Taleban prisoners, freed, last day, Afghan ceasefire

Bagram, Afghanistan - The historic pause in fighting - only the second in nearly 19 years of war - has mostly held across Afghanistan, providing a rare respite from the conflict's grinding violence.

By AFP

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Published: Tue 26 May 2020, 7:00 PM

Last updated: Tue 26 May 2020, 9:58 PM

Afghan authorities freed hundreds more Taleban prisoners on Tuesday, as calls grew for the militants to extend a ceasefire on its third and final day.
The historic pause in fighting - only the second in nearly 19 years of war - has mostly held across Afghanistan, providing a rare respite from the conflict's grinding violence.
Authorities said they planned to release about 900 Taleban prisoners across Afghanistan on Tuesday, approximately 600 of them from the notorious Bagram jail near Kabul.
The release is part of a pledge by the Afghan government to free up to 2,000 insurgent prisoners in response to the Taliban's three-day ceasefire offer, which began Sunday to mark the Muslim holiday of Eid Al Fitr.
The prisoners had signed written pledges not to return to the battlefield, but Qari Mohammadullah, another freed inmate, vowed to continue fighting if foreign forces remain in Afghanistan.
"We don't want foreigners to stay any longer in our country, they must leave immediately," Mohammadullah said.
"We will continue our jihad until every single foreign force leaves."
Each freed inmate was given the equivalent of about $65 in Afghan currency.
The exact number of prisoners to be released Tuesday could vary subject to legal procedures, National Security Council spokesman Javid Faisal told AFP.
He said authorities hoped the Taleban would extend the ceasefire so delayed peace talks could commence.
"If the Taleban are ready to extend the ceasefire, we are ready to continue the ceasefire too," Faisal told a news conference.
"We hope they release our prisoners so that intra-Afghan peace talks begin as soon as possible... The future depends on the Taliban's next move," he said.
A senior Taliban member told AFP the group planned to release about 200 Afghan security force members, without specifying when.
The ceasefire has raised hopes of an extended truce that could pave the way for long-awaited peace talks between the Taleban and Afghan government.
"Extend the ceasefire. Save lives," Shaharzad Akbar, head of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, said on Twitter.
"End the violence so that we can all focus on making services available to the most vulnerable across the country, on expanding access to human rights, so that we have space to breathe."
Another senior Taliban source told AFP the group could extend the ceasefire by seven days if the government speeds up the release of prisoners.
But insurgent spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said he had no information about an extension.
The US-Taleban deal stipulates the Afghan government would release up to 5,000 Taleban prisoners and the militants would free about 1,000 national security personnel.
Prior to this week's releases, Kabul had already freed about 1,000 Taleban inmates, while the insurgents released about 300 Afghan security force captives.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, while welcoming the latest developments, has insisted that freed Taleban prisoners should not return to the battlefield.
President Ashraf Ghani has said his administration is ready to begin peace negotiations - which had originally been scheduled to start by March 10 - seen as key to ending the war in the impoverished country.
Before the ceasefire started the Taleban claimed multiple deadly attacks against Afghan forces across the country.
But they denied carrying out a gruesome rampage in a maternity hospital in Kabul earlier this month when gunmen shot dead mothers, nurses and newborns.
The Afghan military now runs the facility.
 


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