<p>Afghan authorities said Wednesday they will not release hundreds of Taliban captives deemed "too dangerous" despite planned peace talks that hinge on the prisoner exchange.</p>.<p>Under the terms of a US-Taliban deal, Kabul pledged to free some 5,000 Taliban prisoners in a swap that would see the insurgents release around 1,000 Afghan security force captives.</p>.<p>But National Security Council (NSC) spokesman Javid Faisal told AFP that 600 prisoners the Taliban asked to be freed still had "serious criminal cases" against them.</p>.<p>They include people charged with murder, highway robbery and even sodomy, as well as hundreds of foreign fighters, another government official said on condition of anonymity.</p>.<p>"They are too dangerous to be released," the official said.</p>.<p>The Taliban on Wednesday accused the government of fabricating criminal cases against the prisoners.</p>.<p>"If they continue to create more problems in this regard, then it shows they do not want issues to be solved through reasonable ways," spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.</p>.<p>But NSC spokesman Faisal insisted the government was committed to the talks.</p>.<p>"We are ready for peace and will release the remaining prisoners... as per the agreement -- just not these hundreds of prisoners who have serious criminal cases in the courts," he said.</p>.<p>Both sides have pledged to hold direct talks aimed at ending the decades-old conflict in Afghanistan after completing the exchange.</p>.<p>The government has already freed more than 4,000 Taliban fighters, while the insurgents have completed around two-thirds of their releases.</p>.<p>Earlier this week a top Afghan official said it was up to the authorities to decide who should be released.</p>.<p>"We don't expect the Taliban to tell us which inmates to be released," said Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani.</p>
<p>Afghan authorities said Wednesday they will not release hundreds of Taliban captives deemed "too dangerous" despite planned peace talks that hinge on the prisoner exchange.</p>.<p>Under the terms of a US-Taliban deal, Kabul pledged to free some 5,000 Taliban prisoners in a swap that would see the insurgents release around 1,000 Afghan security force captives.</p>.<p>But National Security Council (NSC) spokesman Javid Faisal told AFP that 600 prisoners the Taliban asked to be freed still had "serious criminal cases" against them.</p>.<p>They include people charged with murder, highway robbery and even sodomy, as well as hundreds of foreign fighters, another government official said on condition of anonymity.</p>.<p>"They are too dangerous to be released," the official said.</p>.<p>The Taliban on Wednesday accused the government of fabricating criminal cases against the prisoners.</p>.<p>"If they continue to create more problems in this regard, then it shows they do not want issues to be solved through reasonable ways," spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.</p>.<p>But NSC spokesman Faisal insisted the government was committed to the talks.</p>.<p>"We are ready for peace and will release the remaining prisoners... as per the agreement -- just not these hundreds of prisoners who have serious criminal cases in the courts," he said.</p>.<p>Both sides have pledged to hold direct talks aimed at ending the decades-old conflict in Afghanistan after completing the exchange.</p>.<p>The government has already freed more than 4,000 Taliban fighters, while the insurgents have completed around two-thirds of their releases.</p>.<p>Earlier this week a top Afghan official said it was up to the authorities to decide who should be released.</p>.<p>"We don't expect the Taliban to tell us which inmates to be released," said Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman for President Ashraf Ghani.</p>