The US State Department today again rejected the intention of Ashraf Ghani, former president of Afghanistan, to intervene in the political crisis of the country taken by the Taliban.”He [ Ashraf Ghani] is no longer an important person in Afghanistan,” US Assistant Secretary of State Wendy Sherman told reporters today, refusing to comment on the US decision to grant him asylum after he fled the country. on Sunday, before the Taliban occupation of Kabul. Ghani said today he supports negotiations between the Taliban, who took power in Kabul, and former senior officials, adding that he is “in talks to return” to the country after he fled to the United Arab Emirates.”I support the government’s initiative to negotiate with [former vice-president] Abdullah Abdullah and former president Hamid Karzai. I wish this process a success”, he said, through the social network Facebook.Ashraf Ghani sent a message A video to compatriots from the United Arab Emirates, a country that hours earlier had confirmed having received him for “humanitarian reasons”. The Taliban conquered Kabul on Sunday, culminating an offensive that began in May, when the withdrawal of US military forces and NATO began. International forces have been in the country since 2001, as part of the led offensive by the United States against the extremist regime (1996-2001), which welcomed in its territory the leader of al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden, mainly responsible for the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The seizure of the capital ended a presence 20-year-old foreign military in Afghanistan, from the United States and its NATO allies, including Portugal. Faced with the brutality and radical interpretation of Islam that marked the previous regime, the tali Bãs have assured Afghans that “life, property and honor” will be respected and that women will be able to study and work. , namely European citizens, due to the “dangerous situation” that the country is facing. (RM /NMinuto)Source:Rádio Moçambique Online
Tradução automática do artigo:Aceder ao artigo original