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Friday,
September 28, 2001
Jackson
may meet with Taliban leaders
By Jennifer Loven
Associated Press
WASHINGTON Secretary of State Colin Powell said Jesse
Jackson would likely solve nothing by visiting Afghanistans
ruling Taliban militia because the United States has nothing
to negotiate.
He
is free to travel, Powell said Thursday. I dont
know what purpose would be served right now, since the position
of the United States and the international community is quite
clear.
Jackson
is considering whether to lead a peace delegation
to Taliban officials.
The
Bush administration has demanded the Taliban hand over Osama
bin Laden, the prime suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
on the United States. The Taliban, believed to be harboring
bin Laden and his al-Qaida terrorist network, have refused
to give him up.
The
civil rights activist, minister and former presidential candidate
said Thursday he is reluctant to make the trip.
But
Jackson, speaking to reporters outside a northern Virginia
high school, said he feels obligated to try to free two American
humanitarian workers, jailed by the Taliban along with six
other foreign relief workers on charges of preaching Christianity.
Jackson
said he received a telegrammed invitation Wednesday from a
Taliban spokesman
to come to neighboring Pakistan to resolve the situation in
a way that preserves the dignity and integrity of all sides.
The
Taliban ambassador to Pakistan reportedly said it was Jackson
who first broached the idea, not the militia. The Afghan Islamic
Press, a private news agency close to the Taliban, quoted
Abdul Salam Zaeef as saying that Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed
Omar has accepted his offer to mediate.
It
is not important how the contact was made, but that the contact
was made, Jackson told CNN.
Jackson
discussed the matter with Powell in two phone calls and also
spoke with Condoleezza Rice, President Bushs national
security adviser.
Several
Bush administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said the White House would urge Jackson not to make the trip.
They worry it would be viewed as a U.S. attempt to negotiate
with the Taliban and could fracture the growing but fragile
international coalition against terrorism.
Jackson
said the White House has not attempted to discourage him but
that they could not stop him if he decides to go.
Whatever
role we can play as civilians, through the power of the people,
to get those eight Christians released, we ought to do that,
he said.
Jackson
previously negotiated the freedom of American hostages in
Syria, Cuba and Yugoslavia.
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