Pakistani Taliban chief 'open to talks'

The leader of the Pakistani Taliban says any ceasefire in Pakistan must include an end to US drone strikes.

Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud

The leader of the Pakistani Taliban says any ceasefire must include an end to US drone strikes. (AAP)

Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud says he is still open to peace talks, but that the government hasn't taken any serious steps to start a dialogue.

Mehsud, who has a $US5 million ($A5.3 million) US government bounty on his head, says he will continue to target the US and its allies and reiterated the demand that any ceasefire in Pakistan must include an end to US drone strikes.

"We believe in serious talks and we are ready to sit down for them, but the government has not taken any serious steps," Mehsud said in a rare video interview with the BBC at an undisclosed location in the north-western tribal areas.

"The government has not formally made any contact," he said.

"There is a set procedure for talks, that if one is ready for talks with the other side then they sit with each other and discuss the matters."

The main Pakistani political parties last month backed a government proposal to seek negotiations with the militants, who have been waging a bloody insurgency against the state since 2007.

The umbrella Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction responded with a list of preconditions, including a government ceasefire and the withdrawal of troops from the tribal areas along the Afghan border where the militants have hideouts.

But ongoing violence, including a recent wave of bombings in the northwestern city of Peshawar that killed more than 140 people within a week, has prompted many to question the proposed negotiations.

The TTP, a loose coaltion of militant groups led by Mehsud since 2009, is blamed for killing thousands of people in its war against the Pakistani state in recent years.

But Mehsud told the BBC he was not behind the recent deadly attacks.

"Secret agencies are involved in the recent blasts in public places. It is a conspiracy to defame the Taliban and to stop public support," he said while vowing to continue fighting the US and its allies.


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Source: AAP


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