Pakistani Taleban spokesman denies peace talks

Author: 
RASOOL DAWAR | AP
Publication Date: 
Sun, 2011-12-11 16:35

The conflicting claims are a clear sign of splits within the movement, which could make it even harder to end the violent insurgency gripping the country.
Maulvi Faqir Mohammed, who has been recognized by both militants and officials as the deputy chief of the Pakistani Taleban, had said on Saturday that the group was in negotiations with the government. Mohammed, the first named commander to confirm talks, said an agreement to end the country’s brutal four-year insurgency was within striking distance.
Spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan denied Mohammed’s claims, saying there would be no negotiations until the government imposed Shariah law in the country. The group says it wants to install a hard-line Islamist regime.
Ehsan has on several occasions over the past six months dismissed reports of peace talks by unnamed militant commanders and intelligence officials.
“Talks by a handful of people with the government cannot be deemed as the Taleban talking,” Ehsan told The Associated Press by telephone from an undisclosed location.
The US has pushed for peace negotiations between the Afghan branch of the Taleban and Kabul, but the possibility of similar talks between Islamabad and the Pakistani branch could stoke concern in Washington.
Past deals between the Pakistani Taleban and the government have broken down and given the militants time to strengthen their fight inside the country and against US forces in neighboring Afghanistan.
The group, which is closely allied with Al-Qaeda, has been behind much of the violence tearing apart Pakistan over the last 4 1/2 years. At least 35,000 people have been killed in suicide bombings, other insurgent attacks and army offensives.
But military operations and US drone strikes have weakened the Pakistani Taleban, which has splintered into more than 100 smaller factions, according to security officials, analysts and tribesmen from the insurgent heartland.
The result is that the authority of individual commanders in the movement to control fighters and territory, already murky because of the Taleban’s clandestine nature, is now even more unclear.
Taleban deputy commander Mohammed’s main area of strength has been the Bajur tribal area along the Afghan border, but he reportedly fled to Afghanistan in recent years to escape army operations. He has long been identified as head of the Pakistani Taleban in Bajur and said a deal with the government there could be a “role model” for the rest of the border region.
But another commander, Mullah Dadullah, also now claims to be Taleban chief in Bajur. Dadullah contacted the AP on Sunday and denied the group, also known as the Tehrik-e-Taleban, or TTP, was negotiating with the government.
“As TTP chief responsible for Bajur, I am categorically saying there are no talks going on between the government and the Tehrik-e-Taleban at the Bajur level or the central level,” Dadullah said, also speaking from an undisclosed location.
Ehsan, the spokesman, said Dadullah rather than Mohammed was the head of the Pakistani Taleban in Bajur.
Despite the Taleban’s record of indiscriminate violence, much of it directed at civilians, there is political and public support for peace talks. In September, the weak civilian government announced it was prepared to “give peace a chance” with militants, pandering to right-wing Islamist parties and their supporters.
Government-militant talks could strain the already troubled relationship between Pakistan and the US
Ties suffered a severe blow when NATO air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers at two army posts along the Afghan border on Nov. 26. Pakistan retaliated by closing its Afghan border to NATO supplies and boycotting an international conference aimed at stabilizing Afghanistan.
It also gave the US until Dec. 11 to vacate an air base used by American drones in southwestern Balochistan province. The American ambassador to Pakistan, Cameron Munter, has said the US would do everything it could to meet the deadline.
Two US military transport planes loaded with vehicles and equipment were waiting for approval to take off from Shamsi air base Sunday to complete the evacuation process, said a local Pakistani government official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
A US Embassy representative could not be reached for comment.
Vacating Shamsi is not expected to significantly curtail drone attacks in Pakistan. The US military used it to service drones which took off from Afghanistan heading to the border region, and then could not make it back to base because of mechanical or weather difficulties.

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