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Kabul must be involved in peace talks: US general by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) Feb 5, 2019 The Afghan government must be involved in talks between the US and the Taliban if a push for a peace deal is to be successful, a top general said Tuesday. A months-long drive by the US to engage with the Taliban has ostensibly been aimed at convincing them to talk to Kabul, but the Taliban see President Ashraf Ghani and his government as US-backed puppets. "Ultimately, we need to get to a Taliban-Afghanistan discussion," General Joseph Votel, the head of US Central Command, told US lawmakers. "Only they will be able to resolve the key issues involved in the dispute." The talks, led by US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, come as President Donald Trump seeks to pull US troops from Afghanistan. "I would characterize where we are in the process as very, very early in the process," Votel said. "Ambassador Khalilzad is attempting to create a framework by which we can move forward with discussions. That would be certainly involving the government of Afghanistan." Ghani said Tuesday on Twitter that he had spoken to US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who "underscored the central importance of ensuring the centrality of the Afghan government in the peace process." The Taliban meanwhile are meeting with envoys, many with competing interests in Afghanistan. On Tuesday in Moscow, they met Afghan politicians from outside the government and demanded a new constitution for Afghanistan while promising an "inclusive Islamic system." While no representatives from the Kabul government were invited, some of Ghani's chief rivals -- including former president Hamid Karzai -- were there.
Rights groups urge UN to probe China crackdown in Xinjiang Geneva (AFP) Feb 4, 2019 Rights groups urged the United Nations Monday to send investigators to China's northwestern Xinjiang province to probe the mass detainment of ethnic Uighur and other Muslim minorities. "The abuse in Xinjiang today is so severe that it cries out for international action," Human Rights Watch chief Kenneth Roth told reporters in Geneva. HRW and more than a dozen other human rights and civil society organisations including Amnesty International and the World Uighur Congress, published an appeal for ... read more
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