Former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani supports talks, wants to return to country

Former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani in a screenshot from the video posted to his Facebook page. SCREENSHOT: FACEBOOK/ASHRAF GHANI

ABU DHABI (AFP) - Former Afghan president Ashraf Ghani said on Wednesday (Aug 18) he supports talks between the Taleban and top former officials, and denied allegations that he transferred large sums of money out of the country before fleeing to the United Arab Emirates.

Ghani - making his first appearance since leaving Kabul on Sunday as the Taleban encircled the capital, a departure that ultimately resulted in their full takeover - reiterated that he had left in order to spare the country more bloodshed.

He said in the recorded video message, broadcast on his Facebook page, that he had no intention of remaining in exile in the Gulf nation and was "in talks" to return home.

He also said he was making efforts to "safeguard the rule of Afghans over our country", without offering details.

"For now, I am in the Emirates so that bloodshed and chaos is stopped," Ghani said from the UAE, which confirmed on Wednesday he was being hosted there on "humanitarian grounds".

He voiced support for talks held on Wednesday between senior members of the Taleban movement, Ghani's predecessor Hamid Karzai, and Abdullah Abdullah, who headed the ultimately failed peace process.

"I want the success of this process," he said.

It was Abdullah - a long-time rival of Ghani - who announced the president had left the country on Sunday, suggesting he would be judged harshly.

But Ghani insisted he had left for the good of the country, and not his own wellbeing.

"Do not believe whoever tells you that your president sold you out and fled for his own advantage and to save his own life," he said. "These accusations are baseless... and I strongly reject them."

"I was expelled from Afghanistan in such a way that I didn't even get the chance to take my slippers off my feet and pull on my boots," he added, noting that he had arrived in the Emirates "empty-handed".

He claimed that the Taleban had entered Kabul despite an agreement not to do so.

"Had I stayed there, an elected president of Afghanistan would have been hanged again right before the Afghans' own eyes," he said.

The first time the Taleban seized Kabul, when they established their regime in 1996, they dragged former communist president Mohammed Najibullah from a United Nations office where he had been sheltering, and hanged him in a public street after torturing him.

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