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Negotiate, Taliban tell Panjshir leader

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Sandeep Dikshit

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Tribune News Service

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New Delhi, August 22

War clouds are gathering over the Panjshir valley, the sole redoubt holding out to the Taliban, as it lost the three districts it had captured in the nearby Baghan province.

The Taliban sent massive forces from Kunduz to recapture the recalcitrant Baghlan districts and the resistance folded up in no time. The Taliban are moving on two axis to avoid bloodshed in the Panjshir valley, a narrow gorge that is defensible by a small body of soldiers on both its entrances.

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It asked former Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Afghan chief negotiator Abdullah Abdullah, a half-Tajik, to negotiate with Ahmad Massoud, the son of the legendary Panjshir Valley commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, who is holding out with Afghan Vice-President Amrullah Saleh.

The Taliban leaders also visited the Russian embassy in Kabul and “asked us that Russia will give the following message to Panjshir leaders and people: the Taliban have not made a single attempt to enter Panjshir by force until now. The group hopes to find a peaceful solution to the situation, for example, through a political agreement. The Taliban do not want bloodshed and are committed to dialogue”, said the Russian Ambassador to Afghanistan.

The Taliban extended their amnesty to Ashraf Ghani and Amrullah Saleh, allowing them to return if they wanted.

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