Islamabad, Kabul begin ‘new season’ in bilateral ties

Both sides call for forgetting the past and working hard for a better future, according to Afghan president’s office


News Desk October 01, 2017
Army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa in a meeting with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani in Kabul.

Pakistan and Afghanistan began a ‘new season’ in their frosty bilateral relationship as Afghan President Ashraf Ghani hosted army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa and his delegation at the Presidential Palace in Kabul on Sunday, according to the Afghan media.

President Ghani marked the meeting as a ‘new season of relationship’ between Afghanistan and Pakistan and said good opportunities of cooperation are being provided and both countries should get the most out of the current situation, the presidential office said in a statement quoted by ToloNews.



The two sides discussed various important issues, including security in the region, bilateral relationship, peace and stability, anti-terror efforts, business and transit relationship, and mid- and long-term ties between Afghanistan and Pakistan, read the statement.

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The Pakistani delegation said Islamabad was ready to cooperate with Kabul in counterterrorism efforts which was a joint threat, and added that they supported the Afghan-owned and Afghan-led peace process.

According to the statement, Ghani emphasised that task teams should be set up by both sides in different sectors to form a clear cooperation framework and to take practical steps in this regard. Ghani also said that a monitoring mechanism should be established to make sure both sides implement their promises and that deadlines should be imposed.

The Pakistani delegation said task teams from their side would draft implementation plans, according to the statement.

Both sides should use the current opportunity, Ghani said and added that peace and stability was for the benefit of both Pakistan and Afghanistan and that this could lift the people in both countries out of poverty.

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The Afghan leader stressed the need for practical measures to consolidate the environment of trust and confidence created between Pakistan and AfghanistanPajhwok Afghan News added.

Both sides emphasised that we must forget the past and work hard for a better future, read the statement.

The Inter Services Public Relations, the Pakistan military’s media wing, is yet to issue a statement about the army chief’s meeting with the Afghan president.

COMMENTS (2)

Tariq | 7 years ago | Reply One should never trust these Afghans now “.”
dubious | 7 years ago | Reply Everyone outside of Pakistan seems to know who manages foreign policy - certainly Afghanistan. Anybody believe that COAS asked the PM if he could/should attend this meeting? Didn't think so.
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