Taliban halts peace talks with Afghanistan government over prisoner release row
"The release of prisoners... has been delayed under one pretext or another till now. Therefore, our technical team will not participate in fruitless meetings... starting from tommorrow," spokesman Suhail Shaheed said in a tweet.
The group's withdrawal from peace negotiations follows last week that the extremist group could launch fresh attacks on Afghan forces if its demands are not met.
The release of Taliban prisoners held in detention is part of a deal signed by the US and the extremist group in late February to realise Washington's withdrawal of troops from the nation.
The requires the Afghan government - which was not a signatory to the accord - to free 5,000 Taliban prisoners, and for the insurgents to release 1,000 pro-government captives in return.
Matin Bek, head of the Independent Directorate of Local Governance and a member of 's negotiating team, said on Monday that the Taliban had demanded the release of several prominent commanders involved in "big attacks".
"We are ready to release 400 [prisoners] in the first phase. It is the Taliban who do not want this," Bek was quoted as saying by Tolo News.
"They are asking for the release of 15 [commanders]. If we release the 15 individuals, their hands are stained with people's blood," Bek told a press conference on Monday.
'Near breaking point'
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The extremist group said they had restricted attacks against Afghan security forces to rural outposts, had not attacked international forces or Afghan forces in cities or military installations.
It said these limits on their attacks had not been specifically laid out in the agreement with the US signed in February in Qatar.
The Taliban's statement warned of more violence if the US and the Afghan government continue alleged violations of the deal.
US military spokesman Colonel Sonny Leggett hit back at the allegations, saying the US forces in Afghanistan has "upheld and continues to uphold the military terms of the U.S.-TB [Taliban] agreement; any assertion otherwise is baseless".
Washington has threatened to withhold $1 billion in aid this year if Ghani and Abdullah can't reach a compromise.
Agencies contributed to this report
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