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(REUTERS): India’s ambassador to Qatar held talks with a top Taliban leader on Tuesday, according to Indian foreign ministry, the first formal diplomatic engagement since the Islamist group took over Afghanistan.
According to a statement, Indian envoy, Deepak Mittal, met Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai, the head of the Taliban’s Political Office in Doha, at the request of the Islamist group.
The foreign ministry said the two sides discussed the safety of Indians left behind in Afghanistan. “Mittal also conveyed India’s fears that anti-India militants could use Afghanistan’s soil to mount attacks”, the foreign ministry added.
“The Taliban representative assured the ambassador that these issues would be positively addressed,” the foreign ministry said. The talks come days after Stanekzai was quoted in the local press as saying that the Taliban wanted political and economic ties with India.
India invested more than $3 billion in development work in Afghanistan and had built close ties with the United States-backed Kabul government. However, with the rapid advance of the Taliban, the Indian government was facing criticism at home for not opening a channel of communication with them.
In June, informal contacts were established with Taliban political leaders in Doha, government sources said. The big fear is that groups fighting Indian rule in occupied Kashmir will become emboldened with the victory of the Taliban over foreign forces.
When the Taliban were last in power from 1996-2001, India along with Russia and Iran supported the Northern Alliance that pursued armed resistance against them.
Stanekzai, who Indian officials say received training in an Indian military academy as an Afghan officer in the 1980s, had informally reached out to India last month, asking it not to shut down its embassy, the source said.