Afghan government and Taliban accept Doha as venue for first peace talks

The latest step to bring peace to Afghanistan after 19 years of war will be in the Qatari capital

epa08485262 Afghan security officials patrol on highway in Helmand, Afghanistan, 14 June 2020. Although clashes between the Afghan security forces and the Taliban fighters continued in rural areas, attacks in cities had come down to almost nil.  EPA/WATAN YAR
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Afghanistan's government and the Taliban group have agreed that Doha will be the venue for the first meeting in their peace talks, the two sides said on Sunday.

The talks, known as the intra-Afghan dialogue, will be the first high-level meeting between the two after years of fighting.

No date has been set for the meeting, but it is expected to take place after the two sides settle differences on the release by the Afghan government of 5,000 Taliban prisoners, which could be as soon as the end of next week.

"The first intra-Afghan meeting will happen in Doha," Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen said. The group, he said, was ready to hold intra-Afghan talks within a week of the release of 5,000 prisoners.

The Afghan government has released 3,000 Taliban prisoners so far under an agreement signed between the United States and the insurgent group in February.

That deal outlined a roadmap for withdrawing foreign forces from Afghanistan and peace talks to end the 19-year war.

The government wants talks to begin as soon as possible but has issues with the release of a few hundred high-profile Taliban prisoners, a senior government official said.

The official said the government had offered an alternative prisoner release list to the Taliban.

The spokesman for the Afghan Presidential Palace, Sediq Sediqqi, said on Twitter that Doha had been agreed as the venue for the first talks but said no permanent venue had been agreed.

Everything you need to know about the Afghan deal

Everything you need to know about the Afghan deal

The Qatari capital was the venue for signing the deal between the United States and Taliban. The insurgent group has had a political office in Doha since 2013.