Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Tuesday condemned the killing of a former Taliban minister, saying the victim had recently returned from a Taliban meeting in Dubai where he had supported peace talks. Abdul Raqeeb was gunned down in Pakistan's north-western city of Peshawar on Monday as he left a religious seminary where he had been teaching.
He "was a supporter of peace and reconciliation and had just returned from Dubai after attending peace talks when he was killed in Peshawar", a statement issued by Karzai's office said. It was the first official confirmation of a meeting of Taliban in the Gulf state to discuss the moribund peace process.
A Taliban office in Qatar that opened last June was meant to lead to peace talks, but instead it enraged Karzai after it was styled as an embassy for a government-in-exile. Public efforts at reconciliation have since been frozen. "No Afghan has real security abroad, especially those patriots who want peace and stability in their country," Karzai said in the statement. A senior Afghan Taliban leader confirmed Monday that Raqeeb was part of a group in Peshawar which was "in favour of making some connection with the Afghan government over possible peace talks". A senior member of Afghanistan's government peace council told AFP separately that Aga Jan Motasim, another former minister, was also at the talks in Dubai to "discuss joining the Afghan peace process". Last Thursday the Afghan government released scores of alleged Taliban fighters from Bagram prison, leading to criticism from the United States.
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