Pakistani negotiators today cancelled a scheduled meeting with the Taliban after the insurgents claimed they had killed 23 soldiers kidnapped by them in 2010, dealing a severe blow to the fledgling peace process.
State negotiators withdrew itself form the meeting that was supposed to held today, saying circumstances relating to negotiations with the Pakistani Taliban were not heading in the right direction.
Irfan Siddiqui, coordinator of the government committee formed to hold peace talks with negotiators representing the outlawed Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), said after the killing of 23 Frontier Corps (FC) soldiers, holding talks with the group was a futile enterprise.
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Siddiqui said the committee has deplored and condemned the killing of FC personnel saying such incidents will hamper the process of serious and result oriented negotiations.
In a video statement sent to media last night, Mohmand Agency Taliban chief Umar Khalid Khurasani said that they killed the FC soldiers yesterday to avenge what he said was the custodial killing of Taliban fighters in Pakistan.
The soldiers were kidnapped in 2010 from Shongari checkpost in Mohmand Agency.
The TTP statement lamented that on the one hand the government has initiated the process of talks while on the other it continues to target TTP members.
"The killing of FC personnel is the revenge for the blood of our associates," it said.
"We want to make it clear to the government that we know very well how to avenge the killings of our members," the statement said, warning "if the government did not change its trend, our reaction will be more severe in future".
The group also stressed that will soon release another video showing the killing.
The video emerged hours after local media reports said the TTP was ready for a ceasefire which they said would be announced within 24 hours.