KABUL — The Afghan government said it would not negotiate with divided factions of the Taliban as the insurgents face differences over its leadership succession.

The administration “will negotiate with them under the same title” of “armed anti-government militants”, President Ashraf Ghani’s office said in a statement late on Sunday.

A second round of talks was set for Friday, but postponed after news broke of the death of Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

The movement declared Mullah Omar’s successor to be former deputy leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor. But the late leader’s family declined to pledge allegiance, requesting instead that the next chairperson be chosen by Islamic scholars and group elders.

Mullah Mansoor did not have the support of the group’s wider membership, said Mullah Abdul Manan, the youngest brother of Mullah Omar.

“We haven’t pledged allegiance to anyone,” Manan said in an audio message emailed to the media on Sunday.

“We want the Ulema to resolve the internal differences instead of taking sides,” he said, referring to a group of Muslim scholars.

The government also warned it “will stand . . . against any parallel political structure in the country”.

The Taliban have established provincial shadow administrations, and earlier talks broke down when the group’s office in Qatar was perceived as taking on the character of a diplomatic mission. — dpa.

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