Kabul says presence of Taliban leaders in Pakistan poses challenge for Afghan peace

This handout photograph taken on December 16, 2020 and released by the Pakistan Foreign Ministry, shows Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi gesturing to Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar (L) upon his arrival with the delegation for talks at the Pakistan Foreign Ministry in Islamabad. (AFP)
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Updated 26 December 2020
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Kabul says presence of Taliban leaders in Pakistan poses challenge for Afghan peace

  • Video released on social media showed Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, deputy Taliban leader, in Karachi
  • Baradar met top Pakistani officials last week in attempt to restart stalled peace talks between the group and Kabul

KABUL: The Afghan government said on Friday the presence of Afghan Taliban leaders in Pakistan posed a challenge to Afghanistan’s peace process.

A video released on social media a few days ago showed Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, deputy Taliban leader and head of the group’s peace delegation, among a group of purported Taliban members in the Pakistani city of Karachi.

Baradar was in Pakistan last week with other Taliban delegates to meet top Pakistani officials in the latest attempt to push forward stalled peace talks between the group and the government in Kabul, to end decades of war.

In the video, he is seen telling a crowd that the peace process is being finalized in consultation with Taliban leaders in Pakistan.

In response to the video, the Afghan Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the presence of the “insurgent elements and their leaders in Pakistani territory clearly violate Afghanistan’s national sovereignty and continue to cause crisis and instability in the region, posing a serious challenge to achieving sustainable peace in Afghanistan.”

When the Taliban members arrived in Pakistan on Dec. 16, the ministry issued a statement that the visit was taking place in consultation with the Kabul government.

Following the emergence of the video, however, it said that while the visit initially “raised further hopes for taking practical steps toward stopping the bloodshed and bringing about sustainable peace in Afghanistan,” the footage “disclosed” the presence of Taliban leaders in Pakistani territory.

“It is with deepest regret and concern that some Taliban leaders were seen in the videos visiting (a) training camp,” the statement read. “Over the past week, two sets of news stories about Afghanistan have emerged from Pakistan, one being a source of hope for the government and people of Afghanistan, and the other a cause of great concern.”

The peace process is nearing a turning point and both sides are trying to blame each other for creating blockade.

Taj Mohammed Analyst

Neither the Pakistani government nor the Taliban were immediately available for comment.

The peace negotiations between the two sides follow a landmark deal signed between the US and the Taliban in February, with Pakistan considered key in getting the Taliban to the negotiating table with American delegations, and to ultimately participate in intra-Afghan talks. Those talks are now suspended until Jan. 5.

“The peace process is nearing a turning point and both sides are trying to blame each other for creating blockade,” Taj Mohammed, an analyst, told Arab News.

“The video showing Mullah Baradar in Pakistan is used as a tool by government against the Taliban.”

Kabul has long accused Pakistan of giving shelter to the Afghan Taliban following the group’s ouster in the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan. Islamabad has always denied that claim.


In Pakistan’s flood-hit south, women turn to zero-carbon cookstoves to curb emissions

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In Pakistan’s flood-hit south, women turn to zero-carbon cookstoves to curb emissions

  • Pakistan faces frequent climate-induced rains and floods that killed more than 1,000 people and damaged vast swathes of crops this year
  • Karachi-based non-profit REPL has distributed 500 zero-carbon cookstoves in rural Sindh as part of efforts to hedge against future shocks

MIRPURKHAS: Surrounded by cauldrons, clay pots and utensils, Sonari Mitthoo sits on the floor of her mud house in the southern Pakistani district of Mirpurkhas as she prepares lunch for her family.

Thanks to her new zero-carbon stove, the 35-year-old mother of nine cooks food without choking on smoke and while adapting to climate change in Pakistan’s flood-hit Sindh province.

Karachi-based NGO Revive Environment Private Limited (REPL) distributed around 500 of these climate-friendly stoves in rural communities in Sindh this year, according to its senior manager operations Muhammad Ramzan.

Woman villagers in Mirpurkhas, Thatta, Umerkot and Sujawal districts have since been benefitting from these devices, which were given to them free of cost.

“This stove emits very little smoke while wood consumption is also nominal,” Mitthoo told Arab News, while cooking inside her house in Ramzan Arain village of Mirpurkhas.

“The other [traditional] stoves would make us cough because they used to emit a lot of smoke.”

These new stoves have been designed to ensure efficient air flow that improves combustion in the chamber, which in turn increases the temperature manifolds.

This extraordinary increase in temperature burns out small smoke particles. These climate-friendly stoves have a 4-inch opening to place pots and utensils above them, unlike wider hobs of traditional stoves that waste much of the heat, resulting in less smoke and faster cooking, according to Ramzan.

REPL plans to distribute around 2 million climate-friendly stoves over the next 5 years as Pakistan seeks global funding to hedge against future climate shocks, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) dolling out a $200 million first tranche to the country under its $1.4 billion Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) earlier this month.

Climate Action Accelerator (CAA), a Geneva-based not-for-profit entity working to contain global warming well below two degrees and to strengthen climate resilience, says access to clean cooking stoves and fuels reduces greenhouse gas emissions, creating positive health and wellbeing outcomes for people.

“This stove is good for us because it does not cause us any coughing and does not generate any coal,” Mitthoo said.

Pakistan is ranked among the world’s top climate-affected nations. Intense rains and floods this year killed more than 1,000 people and damaged crops and infrastructure worth billions of dollars in Pakistan’s Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces. Deforestation and glacial melting are the two leading causes compounding the climate crisis in the country.

Pakistan lost nearly 8 percent of its tree cover from 2001 to 2024, according to Global Forest Watch, a forest monitoring digital platform.

At least 78 percent (6,870 hectares) of tree cover loss was due to logging, followed by wildfires at 12 percent (1,080 hectares), permanent agriculture (492 hectares), temporary disturbances like natural disasters (184 hectares) and new settlements and infrastructure (179 hectares).

“One big benefit of this stove is that it is fuel efficient and does not consume too much wood,” said Mitthoo who sees floods inundating her village almost every rainy season, killing people and animals and forcing her family to evacuate.
Hussan Bano, an official at the government-funded Sindh Rural Support Organization (SRSO), said REPL’s cookstove pilot project WAS helping reduce deforestation and environmental degradation in rural areas.

“This [new stove] has a specialty that it uses less wood, produces less smoke and saves time,” she told Arab News. “It also keeps the environment clean.”

Faisal Mustafa, an SRSO organizer in Mirpurkhas, said the smoke-free cookstoves were helping women save about 70 percent of firewood, thus indirectly reducing deforestation.

“These stoves emit lesser smoke and the women of our households who were burning 10 kilograms of wood are now burning only two to three kilograms,” he said.

“When the smoke is reduced, the production of greenhouse gases is reduced. When there is less greenhouse gases production, it is very good for our climate.”

REPL plans to scale up the distribution of these stoves to approximately 1 million in rural Sindh, followed by an additional one million across rural Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, according to Ramzan.

The NGO is in the process of registering its cookstove project with international registry VERRA, a non-profit that operates standards in environmental and social markets, including the world’s leading Verified Carbon Standard crediting program.

The fresh distribution would commence after the completion of the registry process and fulfillment of all regulatory requirements.

“We aim to commence mass distribution by the third quarter of 2026,” Ramzan said, adding they intend to complete registration and fulfil regulatory requirements before that.