<p>Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Friday ordered the release of 500 Taliban prisoners as part of a new ceasefire that could lead into long-delayed peace talks.</p>.<p>Ghani said the militants would be freed during the Eid al-Adha holiday, which started Friday and has prompted a national ceasefire for three days.</p>.<p>The release would complete the government's pledge to free 5,000 Taliban fighters as outlined in a deal the insurgents signed with Washington, he said.</p>.<p>"To show goodwill and accelerate the peace talks, we will release 500 Taliban prisoners in response to the group's three-day ceasefire announcement," Ghani said in an Eid speech.</p>.<p>However, the 500 inmates are not on the original list of 5,000 demanded by the Taliban.</p>.<p>Kabul authorities have already released 4,600 of those prisoners but are hesitating about the release of the final 400, deeming them too dangerous.</p>.<p>"I do not have the right to decide on the release of those 400 Taliban prisoners who are accused of serious crimes," Ghani said, adding that a gathering of Afghan elders would decide their fate.</p>.<p>The Taliban, who have insisted on the release of those 400 militants, did not immediately comment.</p>.<p>The US-Taliban accord signed in February stipulated Kabul would release 5,000 insurgents in return for 1,000 government forces held captive by the militant group.</p>.<p>Late Thursday, the Taliban claimed they had completed the release of all 1,000 government prisoners.</p>.<p>The contentious prisoner swap is a key precondition for peace talks.</p>.<p>Both Ghani and the Taliban signalled this week they were ready for talks after Eid, provided the prisoner swap is complete.</p>
<p>Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Friday ordered the release of 500 Taliban prisoners as part of a new ceasefire that could lead into long-delayed peace talks.</p>.<p>Ghani said the militants would be freed during the Eid al-Adha holiday, which started Friday and has prompted a national ceasefire for three days.</p>.<p>The release would complete the government's pledge to free 5,000 Taliban fighters as outlined in a deal the insurgents signed with Washington, he said.</p>.<p>"To show goodwill and accelerate the peace talks, we will release 500 Taliban prisoners in response to the group's three-day ceasefire announcement," Ghani said in an Eid speech.</p>.<p>However, the 500 inmates are not on the original list of 5,000 demanded by the Taliban.</p>.<p>Kabul authorities have already released 4,600 of those prisoners but are hesitating about the release of the final 400, deeming them too dangerous.</p>.<p>"I do not have the right to decide on the release of those 400 Taliban prisoners who are accused of serious crimes," Ghani said, adding that a gathering of Afghan elders would decide their fate.</p>.<p>The Taliban, who have insisted on the release of those 400 militants, did not immediately comment.</p>.<p>The US-Taliban accord signed in February stipulated Kabul would release 5,000 insurgents in return for 1,000 government forces held captive by the militant group.</p>.<p>Late Thursday, the Taliban claimed they had completed the release of all 1,000 government prisoners.</p>.<p>The contentious prisoner swap is a key precondition for peace talks.</p>.<p>Both Ghani and the Taliban signalled this week they were ready for talks after Eid, provided the prisoner swap is complete.</p>