Taliban prisoners are bussed out of Bagram Prison, next to the US military base north of Kabul. AFP
Taliban prisoners are bussed out of Bagram Prison, next to the US military base north of Kabul. AFP
Taliban prisoners are bussed out of Bagram Prison, next to the US military base north of Kabul. AFP
Taliban prisoners are bussed out of Bagram Prison, next to the US military base north of Kabul. AFP

Afghan authorities release hundreds more Taliban prisoners


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Afghan authorities released hundreds more Taliban prisoners on Tuesday, as calls grew for the militants to extend a ceasefire beyond its third and final day.

The pause in fighting – which came into effect on Sunday to mark the Muslim holiday of Eid Al Fitr – was, for the most part, holding across the country, officials said.

The government responded to the Taliban's three-day ceasefire offer by announcing plans to release up to 2,000 insurgent prisoners.

On Monday, 100 were released and the government said they plan to release another 900, marking the biggest group of Taliban prisoners to be freed yet.

The exact number could vary subject to legal procedures, National Security Council spokesman Javid Faisal told AFP.

Abdul Wasi, 27, from Kandahar province, much of which is under Taliban control, said he was a "holy warrior" when he was detained eight years ago.

"I was told ... to [fight] until all foreign troops are driven out of our country," Wasi, sporting a long beard and wearing a traditional shirt-and-trouser shalwar kameez, told AFP moments after he was freed.

He said he was happy about the US-Taliban deal paving the way for all foreign forces to leave Afghanistan by May next year, and that he wanted a permanent ceasefire.

"If the foreign troops exit, we won't fight," he said as he boarded a Kabul-bound bus along with other freed Taliban members.

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.

Each freed inmate was given the equivalent of about $65 in Afghan currency.

The council, in a statement on Twitter, said the release of prisoners was to "advance the cause of peace, including the continuation of the bilateral ceasefire and the immediate start of direct negotiations".

The ceasefire, only the second of its kind in the 19-year-old conflict, raised hopes of an extended truce that could pave the way for long-awaited peace talks between the Taliban and Afghan government.

"Extend the ceasefire. Save lives," Shaharzad Akbar, head of Afghan 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."

A Taliban source said the group could extend the ceasefire by seven days if the government speeds up the release of prisoners.

Another insurgent source said militants planned to release about 200 Afghan security force personnel they hold.

The Taliban have insisted that they want some 5,000 members held by the government released as agreed in a deal with the United States.

The US-Taliban deal signed in February paved the way for all foreign forces to leave the country by next year.

It also stipulated that the Afghan government would release up to 5,000 Taliban prisoners, and the militants would free about 1,000 national security personnel.

Prior to this week's releases, Kabul had freed about 1,000 Taliban inmates, while the insurgents had let about 300 Afghan security forces captives go.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, while welcoming the latest developments, insisted that Taliban prisoners should not return to the battlefield once freed.

President Ashraf Ghani has said his administration was ready to begin the peace negotiations, critical to ending the war in the impoverished country.

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VEZEETA PROFILE

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Based: Dubai, UAE

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