KABUL, Sept 30: Afghan President Hamid Karzai has made a call for peace to Taliban leader Mullah Omar and has asked the king of Saudi Arabia to help in talks with the militant group.

Karzai’s plea comes hours after Omar urged US and Nato forces in Afghanistan to withdraw or face a similar defeat to occupying Soviet troops a generation ago.

“A few days ago I called upon their leader, Mullah Omar, and said ‘My brother, my dear, come back to your homeland, come and work for the peace and good of your people and stop killing your brothers’,” Karzai told reporters on Tuesday.

Earlier, a Taliban spokesman told Reuters that Omar had said: “Reconsider your wrong decision of wrong occupation, and seek a safe exit to withdraw your forces.”

If the occupation persisted, “you will be defeated in all parts of the world ... like the former Soviet Union”, Omar said.

Karzai denied reports that negotiations with the Taliban had taken place in Saudi Arabia, but said he had written to the Saudi king to ask him to help bring peace to Afghanistan and the region.

Britain’s Observer newspaper said on Sunday that peace talks with the militant group were being mediated by Saudi Arabia and backed by Britain. Karzai rejected the claim saying the article was incorrect.

The Taliban leadership on Monday also denied the report that they were negotiating with the Afghan government to end the war and repeated their pledge to keep fighting.

Saudi Arabia was one of the few countries to recognise a Taliban government when they ruled most of Afghanistan in the 1990s. The hardline Islamists were ousted in late 2001.—Reuters

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