Karzai, Brown support talks with moderate Taliban

Dunya News

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has offered his support to Afghan President Hamid Karzais plan to talk to moderate Taliban.They spoke at a debate with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, ahead of a conference on Afghanistan in London on Thursday.Both leaders said the offer of talks was only to non-extremist Taliban who could renounce violence. President Karzai defended the plan against criticism that it could undermine freedoms won by the Afghan people.Brown said: To weaken the Taliban you divide them and offer those people who are prepared to renounce violence and join the democratic process a way out. There still will be a lot more to accomplish on our own and with the international community.He added: It's detaching the people who are violently committed to the ideology that we are talking about here - if you can detach the others and persuade them that they should be part of the democratic process, that they should renounce violence and that there is a future for them only if they join the democratic process.Mr Karzai defended his government's plan to offer the Taliban talks, after a question from an Afghan student. We will continue to seek peace in Afghanistan, using all the means that are available to us. The offer of talks with the Taliban goes to those who are not part of al-Qaeda, or other terrorist networks, who have accepted the Afghan constitution, who will accept the Afghan constitution, who will return to a normal peaceful life in Afghanistan in accordance with the Afghan constitution, benefiting from it as all other Afghan citizens do.Brown stressed that the plans to train another 100,000 Afghan police and army would help the security situation.He defended keeping British troops in Afghanistan, saying they were needed to build the capacity of Afghanistan's own security forces.Karzai said his goal of having Afghan forces in charge of security within five years did not mean that the country would not need further support. There still will be the need for international forces; there still will be the need for financial support of Afghanistan; there still will be a lot more to accomplish on our own and with the international community.