In February, Afghanistan’s Electoral Commission announced incumbent Ashraf Ghani as the winner of September’s presidential election, but his bitter rival Abdullah Abdullah said he and his allies had won and insisted that he would form a government.
Both Abdullah and Ghani, have issued invitations to parallel swearing-in ceremonies on Monday.
“We don’t think they will make it to getting ready for the intra-Afghan talks on March 10, because of ... the disagreement between the politicians that is even leading to two swearing-in ceremonies,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.
“Instead of swearing in, we want them to focus on intra-Afghan talks. We call upon them to leave the internal disagreements, stop the swearing in, and work for peace.”
He added another major factor was that no practical steps had been taken to implement a condition as a part of the US-Taliban agreement that the government release 5,000 prisoners, a demand that Ghani has rejected.
Nevertheless, meetings between prison officials from both sides took place in Doha on Saturday and Sunday, Mujahid said, the first known contact between Afghan government officials and the Taliban since the Taliban signed the troops withdrawal agreement with the United States on Feb 29.
A presidential spokesman declined to comment on whether the meeting took place.
While insisting they were not formal intra-Afghan talks, Mujahid said the meetings covered technical aspects of the prisoner release, such as preparing a list of detainees and their identifying details.
US Special Envoy Zalmay Khalilzad has been holding talks with both Abullah and Ghani’s camps over the weekend to try and broker a solution to the impasse, diplomatic and political sources have said.