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Kabul: Afghanistan-Pakistan peace talks fail again

Kabul: Afghanistan-Pakistan peace talks fail again
An Afghan man holds mortar shell remains as he stands in front of his damaged house, following cross-border fire from Pakistan’s artillery shelling, at a village in the Spin Boldak district of Kandahar on Nov. 7, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 1 min 17 sec ago

Kabul: Afghanistan-Pakistan peace talks fail again

Kabul: Afghanistan-Pakistan peace talks fail again
  • The two sides met on Thursday in Turkiye to finalize a truce agreed on October 19 in Qatar
  • Relations between the one-time allies, who share a 2,600-kilometer frontier, have soured in recent years

KABUL: Afghanistan’s Taliban government said Saturday the latest round of peace talks with Pakistan had failed, blaming Islamabad’s “irresponsible and uncooperative” approach and stoking fears of further violence.

The two sides met on Thursday in Turkiye to finalize a truce agreed on October 19 in Qatar, following deadly clashes between the South Asian neighbors.

Both have remained virtually silent on the content of the discussions, which are known only to have addressed long-standing security issues.

“During the discussions, the Pakistani side attempted to shift all responsibility for its security to the Afghan government, while showing no willingness to take responsibility for either Afghanistan’s security or its own,” Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid wrote on social media.

“The irresponsible and uncooperative attitude of the Pakistani delegation has not yielded any results,” he said.

But, he said, “The ceasefire that has been established has not been violated by us so far, and it will continue to be observed.”

Neither Islamabad nor mediators immediately commented on the announcement.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar hinted a day earlier that the negotiations were falling through, saying that the onus lay on Afghanistan to fulfil pledges to clamp down on terrorism, “which so far they have failed.”

“Pakistan shall continue to exercise all options necessary to safeguard the security of its people and its sovereignty,” he wrote.

Demands

Relations between the one-time allies, who share a 2,600-kilometer frontier, have soured in recent years over accusations from Islamabad that Afghanistan harbors militant groups which stage attacks in Pakistan.

The Taliban government has consistently denied the allegations.

Islamabad wants guarantees from Afghanistan’s Taliban government that it will stop supporting armed organizations, in particular the Pakistani Taliban (Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan), which Kabul denies harboring.

Afghanistan meanwhile wants its territorial sovereignty to be respected and accuses Islamabad of supporting armed groups against it.

Each side has threatened a resumption of hostilities that saw more than 70 people killed and hundreds wounded last month if the negotiations failed.

The talks were threatened on Friday after each side blamed the other for border fighting in Spin Boldak on the Afghan side.

A district hospital official said that five people were killed in the fighting, including four women and one man.

Afghanistan did not retaliate “out of respect for the negotiating team and to prevent the loss of civilian lives,” the Taliban spokesman said.

Islamabad also accuses Afghanistan of acting with the support of India, its historical enemy, during a period of closer ties between the two countries.


Bulgaria moves to prevent shutdown of its only oil refinery ahead of US sanctions

Updated 24 sec ago

Bulgaria moves to prevent shutdown of its only oil refinery ahead of US sanctions

Bulgaria moves to prevent shutdown of its only oil refinery ahead of US sanctions
SOFIA: Bulgaria is racing to prevent the shutdown of its only oil refinery before US sanctions on the Russian owner take effect later this month.
Parliament in Sofia approved legal changes that grant additional state authority to a government-appointed manager of the Lukoil-owned Burgas refinery on the Black Sea coast.
The move came after a top international commodities trader dropped plans to purchase Lukoil’s international assets, as the company rejected US government allegations of being “the Kremlin’s puppet.”
Lukoil said it was selling its international assets in response to US sanctions aimed at pushing Russia to agree to a ceasefire in its war against Ukraine. The company has stakes in oil and gas projects in 11 countries, including the Burgas refinery, as well as gas stations in many countries.
Under the new amendments, the manager is granted significant operational control of the refinery, including the right to sell its shares. Opposition lawmakers criticized the changes, saying they could prompt legal action against Bulgaria.
“This person will be granted such extraordinary powers that, in the end, Lukoil will sue Bulgaria — and the money will end up in Russia,” said Ivaylo Mirchev, leader of the Democratic Bulgaria alliance.
The ruling coalition introduced the changes, arguing that the US sanctions, scheduled to take effect on Nov. 21, “will effectively lead to the shutdown of the refinery’s operations due to the refusal of all counterparties to make payments to Lukoil-owned companies.”
In 1999, the Russian oil giant Lukoil acquired the Neftochim plant on the Black Sea. It is the largest oil refinery in the Balkans. Recent estimates by experts set the value of the refinery at 1.3 billion euros ($1.5 billion).
The Lukoil-Neftochim refinery is Bulgaria’s largest company, playing a significant role in the country’s economy. In 2024, it had a turnover of about 4.7 billion euros ($5.4 billion). Its nationwide network of oil depots and gas stations, as well as its supply of ships and aircraft, gives it near-monopoly status.
Last week, Bulgaria imposed temporary restrictions on the export of petroleum products, including those destined for other European Union members, to ensure sufficient domestic supplies ahead of new US sanctions on Russian energy. The ban covers exports of petroleum products, including diesel and aviation fuel.