Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
Taliban
rejected
on
Monday
an
Afghan
government
offer
of
a
ceasefire
and
said
they
would
persist
with
their
attacks,
militant
commanders
said,
while
insurgents
ambushed
three
buses
and
nearly
200
passengers
travelling
for
a
holiday.
Two
Taliban
commanders
said
their
supreme
leader
rejected
President
Ashraf
Ghani's
Sunday
offer
of
a
three-month
ceasefire,
beginning
with
this
week's
Eid
al-Adha
Muslim
holiday.
In
June,
the
Taliban
observed
a
government
ceasefire
over
the
three-day
Eid
al-Fitr
festival,
leading
to
unprecedented
scenes
of
government
soldiers
and
militants
embracing
on
front
lines,
and
raising
hopes
for
talks.
But
one
of
the
Taliban
commanders
said
the
June
ceasefire
had
helped
US
forces,
who
the
Taliban
are
trying
to
drive
out
of
the
country.
Taliban
leader
Sheikh
Haibatullah
Akhunzada
rejected
the
new
offer
on
the
grounds
that
it
too
would
only
help
the
American-led
mission.
'Our
leadership
feels
that
they'll
prolong
their
stay
in
Afghanistan
if
we
announced
a
ceasefire
now,'
a
senior
Taliban
commander,
who
declined
to
be
identified,
said
by
telephone.
An
official
in
Ghani's
office
said
the
three-month-long
ceasefire
declared
by
the
government
was
conditional,
and
if
the
Taliban
did
not
respect
it,
the
government
would
maintain
military
operations.
The
Taliban
have
launched
a
wave
of
attacks
in
recent
weeks,
including
on
the
city
of
Ghazni,
southwest
of
Kabul.
Hundreds
of
people
have
been
killed
in
the
fighting.
Government
officials
are
trying
to
secure
the
release
of
at
least
170
civilians
and
20
members
of
the
security
forces
who
were
taken
hostage
by
Taliban
from
three
buses
in
the
northern
province
of
Kunduz.
Esmatullah
Muradi,
a
spokesman
for
the
governor
of
Kunduz,
said
the
kidnapping
happened
when
the
buses
were
travelling
through
Kunduz
from
Takhar
province.
A
Taliban
commander
in
Afghanistan
said
civilian
hostages
were
being
divided
into
small
groups
to
be
sent
back
home.
However,
members
of
Afghan
security
forces
had
been
shifted
to
the
Taliban's
secret
jail.
'Most
probably
we
would
exchange
them
for
our
prisoners
later,'
said
the
commander.
Separately,
Mujahid
said
the
Taliban
would
release
at
least
500
prisoners,
including
members
of
the
security
forces,
on
Monday,
a
day
before
Eid
celebrations
begin.
The
Taliban
rejected
on
Monday
an
Afghan
government
offer
of
a
ceasefire
and
said
they
would
persist
with
their
attacks,
militant
commanders
said,
while
insurgents
ambushed
three
buses
and
nearly
200
passengers
travelling
for
a
holiday.
Two
Taliban
commanders
said
their
supreme
leader
rejected
President
Ashraf
Ghani's
Sunday
offer
of
a
three-month
ceasefire,
beginning
with
this
week's
Eid
al-Adha
Muslim
holiday.
In
June,
the
Taliban
observed
a
government
ceasefire
over
the
three-day
Eid
al-Fitr
festival,
leading
to
unprecedented
scenes
of
government
soldiers
and
militants
embracing
on
front
lines,
and
raising
hopes
for
talks.
But
one
of