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		Senior Taliban leader expected to join 
		talks with U.S. in Qatar shortly 
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		 [January 26, 2019] 
		By Jibran Ahmad 
 KABUL/PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - The 
		Taliban's new political leader is expected to join meetings with U.S. 
		officials in Qatar imminently, Taliban sources said on Saturday as the 
		latest round of talks to find ways to end the 17-year Afghan war entered 
		a sixth day.
 
 The peace talks, initially slated for two days, are continuing despite 
		Taliban representatives staging a brief walkout on Friday over 
		differences with U.S. special peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad.
 
 Two senior Taliban officials in Afghanistan who are privy to the 
		negotiations said momentum was building following Thursday's appointment 
		of Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar as the political leader of the hardline 
		Islamist group.
 
 Baradar, released from a prison in Pakistan last year, is expected to 
		fly to Qatar to join the session - a move they believe will be welcomed 
		by a U.S. side keen to talk to senior Taliban figures.
 
 "He is expected to join soon," one of the senior Taliban officials in 
		Afghanistan said.
 
 The U.S. Embassy in Kabul was not immediately available for comment.
 
 Question marks remain over Baradar's health, with Taliban officials 
		saying after his release in October that Baradar needed rest before 
		joining the movement's leadership council.
 
 Baradar, who earlier led the insurgent group's military operations in 
		southern Afghanistan, was arrested in 2010 by a team from Pakistan and 
		U.S. intelligence agencies.
 
 A co-founder of the movement, he was a close friend of the reclusive 
		former Taliban leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar, who gave him his nom de 
		guerre, “Baradar” or “brother”.
 
 
		
		 
		His appointment marks a new push to bring Taliban out of the political 
		and diplomatic shadows, with several other officials being appointed to 
		oversee education, mining and health issues.
 
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            Staging near daily attacks against the Western-backed Afghan 
			government and its security forces, the Taliban controls nearly half 
			of Afghanistan and are widely seen as more powerful than at any time 
			since being toppled in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion.
 Speaking in Davos, Switzerland, the Afghan president, Ashraf Ghani, 
			said last week that 45,000 members of the country’s security forces 
			had been killed since he took office in the fall of 2014.
 
 When he joins talks, Baradar will be faced with easing U.S. fears 
			over the Taliban's refusal to cut ties with al-Qaeda - the issue at 
			the core of Friday's walkout.
 
            
			 
            
 One of the key U.S. demands is a guarantees from the Taliban that 
			Afghanistan would not be used as future base for terrorist attacks 
			against the U.S. and its allies.
 
 "The Taliban has assured the U.S. that they will oppose any attempt 
			by militant groups to use Afghanistan to stage terrorist attacks on 
			America or its allies," a senior Taliban leader told Reuters, adding 
			that U.S. wants the Taliban to snap ties with Islamic State and al 
			Qaeda.
 
 "We are willing to denounce links with Islamic State but we refuse 
			to disconnect ties with al-Qaeda because they accept Taliban supremo 
			Sheikh Haibatullah Akhundzada as their leader too," the leader told 
			Reuters, on condition of anonymity.
 
 (Additional reporting by Abdul Qadir Sediqi, Rupam Jain in Kabul, 
			Writing by Greg Torode, Editing by)
 
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