"We have from time to time reminded all stakeholders about the red lines that was drawn by the world community and certainly by the participants should not be touched, should not be erased and should not be violated," External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid told reporters.
Khurshid's comments came a day after the Afghan Taliban announced opening of its political office in Qatari capital Doha and expressed willingness to hold peace talks with Afghan President Hamid Karzai's government and other stakeholders.
"But ultimately it's between sovereign government of Afghanistan and citizens of Afghanistan who happens to pursue the ideology of the Taliban," he said.
"We have also said ultimately it is for Afghanistan to take their own decisions and to ensure that the peace initiative should be Afghanistan-own and Afghanistan-driven. I will expect the latest initiative would not depart from position," he said last evening.
The militant group, which has waged over a decade long insurgency against the US-led NATO forces in Afghanistan, said it was willing to use all legal means to end what it called the occupation of Afghanistan.
The group, which has killed hundreds of US and Afghan soldiers and has been blamed for series of deadly attacks inside Afghanistan, however, did not say whether they would stop fighting or not.
The Taliban's decision followed handover of security in Afghanistan to Afghan forces by the US-led NATO coalition.
