"I am pessimistic about the deal and worried about what will happen after," the 50-year-old added, echoing concerns expressed by others in the country. Fellow shopkeeper Husain Ahmad said that while Afghans were "hungry for peace", the agreement represented a victory for the insurgents.
"We as Afghans don't know what the contents of the deal are," Ahmad said, criticising the decision to shut out the Kabul government from the negotiations in Doha.
Immediately after the deal was signed, Taliban political spokesman Suhail Shaheen told AFP that Afghan women "should not worry about their rights".
"We accept their rights and acknowledge their right to education and to work," Shaheen said.
"We also request them as Muslim women to observe the Islamic hijab, only that."
But activist Zahra Hussaini said she had no faith in such claims.
"I don't trust the Taliban, and remember how they suppressed women when they were ruling," the 28-year-old told AFP in Kabul.
"Today is a dark day, and as I was watching the deal being signed, I had this bad feeling that it would result in their return to power rather than in peace," she said.
Elsewhere in the country however, some were celebrating the end of the war and expressing hope that it would unite the country.
"We are very optimistic about this deal, and are impatiently waiting for the foreign invaders to leave Afghanistan," said Arefullah Saad, a resident of eastern Khost province, where the Taliban boast a strong presence.