Pakistan resumes Taliban talks despite deadly blast
Meeting comes after a month-long ceasefire announced and more than 110 people killed in attacks since late January

Pakistani government and Taliban negotiators resumed peace talks on Wednesday and said they were ready to move to a decisive “second phase” even as a militant attack killed six military personnel.
The government opened negotiations with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) last month in a bid to end their bloody seven-year insurgency, but the process broke down more than two weeks ago after militants killed 23 kidnapped soldiers.
The Taliban announced a month-long ceasefire at the weekend and the two sides met in the country’s northwest on Wednesday.
The resumption came despite a major attack in Islamabad on Monday claimed by a splinter group that killed 11 people and a roadside bomb killing six paramilitary troops on Wednesday.
A joint statement read out after the meeting in Akora Khattak, 50 kilometres east of Peshawar, the main city of northwest Pakistan, said the talks had entered a “crucial stage”.
Lead government negotiator Irfan Siddiqui told reporters they had made “satisfactory” progress.