Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar has
publicly declared that he wants good relations with the world, supports
“modern” education and will respect other ethnic and religious
communities within Afghanistan.
In an apparent attempt to rehabilitate the Taliban’s image - damaged when its fighters shot Pakistan teenager Malala Yousafzai in the head because she had campaigned for girls' education, and when it was blamed for killing 20 polio workers – Omar issued a statement Tuesday that struck a more conciliatory, inclusive approach.
However, he stressed his followers should not take part in the
proposed election in Afghanistan next year after the withdrawal of most
foreign forces.
Omar's exact whereabouts are unknown, and the
statement - on the eve of the Muslim Eid holiday - was released by
Taliban officials.
The Taliban leader has never expressed support
for modern education, but in the statement he said it was “a fundamental
need of every society in the present time.”
The Taliban leader has never expressed support for modern education,
but in the statement he said it was “a fundamental need of every society
in the present time.”
An Afghan Taliban official, speaking
anonymously after the statement was issued, said that girls would be
allowed to go to school if the Taliban returned to power.
However,
he said they would oppose co-education and would build separate
institutions for the girls where they would be taught according to
Islam’s Shariah.
“We learnt a lot from the past mistakes and would
not repeat those if came into power. But that doesn’t mean we would
compromise on our Islamic values,” the Taliban official said.
He
added that the Taliban had formed a commission that had drafted a new
education policy so the international community could not blame them for
opposing education.
In his statement, Omar also said the Taliban
was ready to share the power with other political stakeholders and
willing to talk to opponents.
"When the occupation ends, reaching
an understanding with the Afghans will not be a hard task because, by
adhering to and having common principles and culture, the Afghans
understand each other better," he said.
Omar also said the Taliban
would not take revenge against people who had sided with the U.S.-led
international forces in Afghanistan if they admitted they had made a
mistake.
“We consider as our brother and give him a welcome
whoever openly expresses regret about his support for occupation,”
Mullah Omer said.
He also said the Taliban was strongly opposed to having the country divided into separate regions.
“We
would work together with the Afghan people and would not allow division
of our country under geographical locations and ethnic denominations,”
Omar said.
But he stressed the Taliban would not take part in
democratic elections, planned for next year following the final
withdrawal of foreign forces.
“Our pious and Mujahid people know
that selection, de facto, takes place in Washington. These nominal
rulers are not elected through the ballots of the people. Rather they
are selected as per the discretion of Washington,” the Taliban leader
said.
Omar also said international humanitarian organizations were
allowed in Taliban-controlled territory, providing they are not
involved in politics, espionage or promoting un-Islamic ways. In June
2012, the Taliban banned polio workers and some 20 have been shot dead for taking part in vaccination campaigns seen as a potential CIA plot following the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.
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