Afghan sides reveal peace framework

Residents carry bodies killed in an airstrike during a protest in Baghlan province, northern Afghanistan, Tuesday, July 9, 2019. Even as an All-Afghan conference that brought Afghanistan's warring sides together was ending, the airstrike killed seven people, six of them children. (AP Photo/Mehrab Ibrahimi)
Residents carry bodies killed in an airstrike during a protest in Baghlan province, northern Afghanistan, Tuesday, July 9, 2019. Even as an All-Afghan conference that brought Afghanistan's warring sides together was ending, the airstrike killed seven people, six of them children. (AP Photo/Mehrab Ibrahimi)

KABUL, Afghanistan -- Talks that brought together Afghanistan's warring sides ended Tuesday with a statement that laid down the outlines of a road map for the country's future and ending nearly 18 years of war.

Zalmay Khalilzad, Washington's peace envoy, has said he is hoping for a final agreement by Sept. 1, which would push the country a step closer to peace and allow the withdrawal of U.S. and NATO troops. He was to begin an eighth round of peace talks with the Taliban later on Tuesday also in Qatar's capital, Doha, where the two-day conference was held.

Tuesday's statement said that a post-war Afghanistan would have an Islamic legal system, protect women's rights "within the Islamic framework of Islamic values," and ensure equality for all ethnic groups. The much-touted conference was attended by Taliban, Afghan government representatives, women and members of the country's nascent civil society. It aimed to produce a new level of consensus among Afghanistan's fractured society.

No date was given for the tougher negotiations to follow, when the many sides in Afghanistan's protracted conflict will sit down to hammer out the details of what an Islamic system will look like and what will become of the many local militias affiliated with the country's powerful warlords. They will also have to tackle how women's rights fit into the definition of "Islamic values," as well as whether to set up an interim administration and when elections should be held.

The conference agreed to keep the momentum going with confidence-building measures. These included the unconditional release of old, disabled and sick prisoners -- though there was no mention of the affiliation of the prisoners or whether it included those captured in the war. The warring sides also agreed not to attack institutions such as hospitals and schools, as well as national infrastructure such as hydroelectric dams. They also agreed to be more diplomatic in their references to each other.

There was no mention of a cease-fire. Khalilzad has said the negotiations on the final deal would address that.

Both sides did agree, however, to do more to protect civilians. The United Nations has expressed growing concern over civilian deaths in the conflict, and has criticized all sides for rising casualty rates, including from stepped up U.S. airstrikes.

Even as the conference was ending, an airstrike in Afghanistan's northern Baghlan province killed seven people, six of them children.

Early on Tuesday, a strike hit Kotuk Khiel village. The residents carried the bodies of the dead to the provincial capital of Pul-e-Kumri, where Afghanistan National Defense Forces had blocked the road.

Safdar Mohesni, the provincial council chief, said the airstrike was carried out by "foreigners," a reference to the United States. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. military to a request from The Associated Press.

The Taliban have also been deeply criticized for their many attacks that have killed or wounded civilians, including a suicide car bombing on Sunday in Ghazni province that killed 12 people and wounded more than 150 others, including many students at a nearby school.

Tuesday's statement also said all sides in the conflict would want international guarantors of any final agreement.

It said that future meetings would be all-inclusive -- without any mention of direct talks with the Afghan government. The Taliban had imposed their vision of Islamic theocracy on Afghanistan for five years before being toppled by U.S.-backed forces in 2001. Consequently, they consider President Ashraf Ghani's government a puppet of the U.S. and have refused to talk to it, preferring to deal with the Americans directly.

Participants attending the all-Afghan conference, which Germany and Qatar jointly sponsored, attended as ordinary Afghans "on equal footing." While there were senior government officials in attendance, they were there as ordinary Afghans and not in their official capacity.

Khalilzad's talks with the Taliban will continue on the timeframe for U.S. and NATO troop withdrawal, verifiable anti-terror guarantees, intra-Afghan negotiations, and an eventual cease-fire.

Information for this article was contributed by Amir Shah of The Associated Press.

A Section on 07/10/2019

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