Type Here to Get Search Results !

 WELCOME to MSTNews Stay with Us for more Update

The Taliban have criticized the remarks of the Afghan vice president


President Ghani's First Vice President Amrullah Saleh and Second Vice President Sarwar Danish

Following remarks by Sarwar Danish and Amrullah Saleh, both vice-presidents of President Ghani, about the Taliban's rule, the group said their statements were "incorrect" against the regime during their rule.

The Taliban also accused Mr Danish and Mr Saleh of being "anti-Islamic" and "anti-peace" and "hostile" to them in a statement issued today.

The Taliban are making the remarks as First Vice President Amrullah Saleh told a gathering at the Presidential Palace on Monday (September 21th) on the occasion of the International Day of Peace that Afghans are a shameful people but the Taliban are using their culture, people and women in their actions. Have insulted.

He claimed that the Taliban had collected ushers and zakat during their five-year rule without any specific regulations, but there was no evidence or document, and most of their work was based on "friendship".

But the Taliban responded by saying that before and after the Islamic Emirate, in their view, the property and honor of Afghans had been "violated" and that the rights of all people would be protected in their "Islamic system." No one will be wronged.

The group also said that during their rule, they had implemented "Sharia" in accordance with "Islamic rules" and that anyone who considered the implementation of "jurisprudential rules" against Islam was "ignorant" and out of touch with Islam. Are "unknown".

Mr Saleh said in a recent statement on Tuesday that the ongoing talks in Doha were not being called inter-Afghan talks but "Afghan peace talks".

He said in a statement on Twitter: "Afghan peace talks show that the conflict in Afghanistan is multi-dimensional and its solution is multi-dimensional. These are not inter-Afghan talks. Hopefully the right terms will be used. Names are important."

In a speech to President Ghani during a visit to Bamyan, Mr Danish likened the Taliban's rule to that of "Sadozi and Mohammadzai".

A day earlier, Sarwar Danish, Ghani's second vice-president, had called the Taliban's rule "violent and dictatorial", prompting a backlash.

Speaking to President Ghani during a visit to Bamyan, Mr Danish described the Taliban's rule as similar to that of "Sadozi and Mohammadzai" and said it was "no different" from the Taliban's Islamic Emirate.

But his comparisons angered Afghans, who accused him of "insulting" Afghanistan's history and personalities and demanded an apology.

But at yesterday's meeting on the International Day of Peace, Sarwar Danish said his words were perceived as "incorrect" and aimed not to insult history or any nation, but only to compare "republics" and "emirates".

The two sides have been at loggerheads over peace talks in Doha, but have not reached an agreement on a roadmap for more than a decade.

Some sources have told the MST News that one of the points of contention is the Taliban's use of Hanafi as the official religion in the initial talks.

"Shiite clerics have no problem with the Hanafi religion. But if anyone says that Afghanistan's Shiites will be treated like any other religious minority within the framework of Islamic law, it means that "As Shiites are outside of Islam and Sharia must be applied, it is unacceptable."

The Afghan constitution recognizes Sunni Hanafi and Shia Jafari as the country's official religions. The majority of the population is Sunni, but there is also a minority Shia.

Post a Comment

0 Comments
* Please Don't Spam Here. All the Comments are Reviewed by Admin.

Top Post Ad

Below Post Ad

Hollywood Movies