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News ID: 86813
Publish Date : 23 January 2021 - 21:32

Fighting Continues in Afghanistan Amid Talks

KABUL (Dispatches) – In the conflict-battered Afghanistan fighting continues as more than 50 militants have been killed over the past 24 hours amid the ongoing talks in Doha, officials said Saturday.
In the latest wave of violent incidents, the armed militants attacked police in Kocha-e-Dash area of Police District 11 of Herat city, the capital of the western Herat province, on Saturday killing one police constable and wounding two others, provincial police spokesman Abdul Ahad Walizada said.
According to the official, two attackers have been arrested.
The ongoing conflicts, according to security officials, have left more than 50 dead with majority of them Taliban militants over the past 24 hours in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan’s 20 out of 34 provinces, according to media, have been the scene of fighting over the past two days.
Increase in fighting has been seen amid the ongoing Afghan talks in Qatar’s capital Doha.
The Afghan peace talks which begun on Sept. 12 following the U.S.-Taliban so-called peace deal inked in late February last year to end the U.S.’s longest war, pave the way for the pullout of thousands of U.S. troops in Afghanistan and facilitate the intra-Afghan dialogue has made little progress to achieve the goals.
In a new twist, the White House announced that the United States will review the agreement reached with the Taliban last year.
Contrary to expectations, the talks have failed to reduce violence and security incidents in Afghanistan.
Welcoming the decision by the new U.S. administration, Afghan government presidential spokesman Sediq Sediqi, according to local media, said Saturday that the U.S.-Taliban peace deal inked during Trump’s administration had failed to control violence or to pave the way for ceasefire in Afghanistan.
Expressing concerns over increase in violent incidents, Chairman of High Council for National Reconciliation Abdullah Abdullah on Saturday said that the security incidents have increased, while Afghans need the ceasefire to make the talks succeed.