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India, Afghanistan Charge Pakistan for Aiding Talibans

India, Afghanistan Charge Pakistan for Aiding Talibans

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Manas Dasgupta

NEW DELHI, July 16: India and Afghanistan charged Pakistan for supporting terror groups like Talibans even as Pakistan expressed “disappointment” over the blames claiming the Islamic country to be a “victim” of turmoil in Afghanistan.

“Pakistan has not severed its relationship with terror groups, said Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani in a pointed charge at the neighbouring country as Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan sat a few feet away on stage at the Central and South Asia connectivity conference held on Friday.

India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, who also attended the conference, referred to the problems with transit trade in his speech alluding to Pakistan. He said economic development and prosperity go “hand in hand” with peace and security.

In a hard-hitting speech, Ghani quoting intelligence reports said more than 10,000 ‘jihadi’ fighters have entered Afghanistan in the last month while the Pakistan government had failed to convince the Taliban to participate “seriously” in the peace talks.

“Contrary to repeated assurances by Prime Minister Khan and his Generals that Pakistan does not find a Taliban takeover in Afghanistan in Pakistan’s interest and short of use of force will use its power and influence to make the Taliban negotiate seriously, networks and organizations supporting the Taliban are openly celebrating the destruction of the assets and capabilities of the Afghan people and State,” Ghani said at the inaugural ceremony of the conference as he listed the challenges and threats to regional connectivity.

Responding to the charges a few minutes later, Imran Khan said he was “disappointed” by the allegation that Pakistan had a “negative role” in the conflict. “President Ghani, the country that is going to be most affected by turmoil in Afghanistan is Pakistan. Pakistan suffered 70,000 casualties in the last 15 years. The last thing Pakistan wants is more conflict,” Khan said, addressing the Afghan President directly.

“I can assure you that no country has tried harder to get Taliban on the dialogue table than Pakistan. We have taken all action short of taking military action, and every effort to bring them to the dialogue table and have a peaceful settlement there, and to blame Pakistan for what is going on in Afghanistan is extremely unfair,” he added.

Even as Ghani and Khan spoke, another spat broke out between Kabul and Islamabad over allegations by Afghanistan Vice-President Amrullah Saleh that the Pakistan military had threatened missile launches against the Afghan Air Force if it targeted Taliban militia that has claimed border check-posts at Spin Boldak. In a statement, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry denied the claim. It said Pakistan acknowledged Afghanistan’s sovereignty.

Khan also brought in Pakistan’s favourite Jammu and Kashmir issue o hit back at India. He said apart from the violence in Afghanistan, “outstanding disputes” like Kashmir between regional players like India and Pakistan was the other big challenge to regional connectivity. Talking to media later, he even blamed the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) for creating hurdles to India-Pakistan dialogue.

In his speech at the plenary session, which was attended by the foreign ministers of Russia and China and senior officials from about 40 countries, including the U.S., the U.K., EU and Iran, Jaishankar didn’t refer directly to Pakistan or to China as he stressed the need for resilient supply chains in the post COVID-19 situation, as well as the problems of “one-way” trade.

“Blocking connectivity in practice while professing support in principle benefits no one. A one-sided view of trade rights and obligations can never work. No serious connectivity can ever be a one-way street,” Jaishankar said in a reference to Pakistan’s refusal to allow Indian trade to Afghanistan over the land route through the Wagah border.

Jaishankar also spoke of India’s efforts for a land route to Iran’s Chabahar port, which India is now promoting as a “secure, viable and unhindered” alternate access to the sea.

Uzbekistan and India announced the formation of the India-Uzbekistan-Iran-Afghanistan Quadrilateral working group to work on Chabahar during the conference. However, Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev announced that the Termez-Mazar-i-Sharif-Peshawar railroad would be a “key element of the entire architecture of connectivity” from which India would be cut out unless Pakistan reopened the land route for transit trade.

Making an oblique reference to China’s Belt and Road Initiative, Jaishankar said building connectivity must conform to international law. “Respecting sovereignty and territorial integrity are the most basic principles of international relations,” he added, referring to the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) that runs through land India claims to be its own in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK).

 

 

 

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