Cross-border terrorism intolerable, UNSC told
Permanent Representative of Pakistan to the UN Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad. photo: file
Terrorism emanating from Afghanistan remains the "gravest threat" to Pakistan's national security, a senior Pakistani diplomat has told the UN Security Council, as he exhorted the Taliban authorities to fulfill their international obligations on counterterrorism.
"The TTP (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan), with nearly 6,000 fighters, remains the largest UN-designated terrorist group on Afghan soil," Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, permanent representative of Pakistan to the UN, said in a debate on the situation in Afghanistan on Wednesday.
Pakistan, he said, had thwarted multiple infiltration attempts of the TTP and the BLA (Balochistan Liberation Army) terrorists from across Afghanistan, confiscating significant caches of sophisticated military grade modern equipment left behind by international forces in Afghanistan — mainly weapons abandoned by the departing US troops.
"These efforts come at a heavy price -- huge sacrifices by our valiant security forces and civilians," Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad said, referring to the martyrdom of 12 Pakistani soldiers in a single incident just this month while they were defending the borders.
"This situation is intolerable," the Pakistani envoy told the 15-member Council.
Terrorist entities, including ISIL-K/Da'esh, Al-Qaeda, TTP, BLA, and its Majeed Brigade, he said, operate from Afghan sanctuaries, with more than 60 such terrorist camps serving as hubs for enabling cross-border infiltration and attacks.
"We have credible evidence of collaboration among these terrorist groups through joint training, illicit weapons trade, refuge to terrorists, and coordinated attacks – all aimed at targeting civilian and law enforcement agencies and disrupting and sabotaging infrastructure and development projects in Pakistan."
He called for swift action on the proposal by China and Pakistan in the UNSC's 1267 Sanctions Committee to designate the BLA and Majeed Brigade as terrorist organizations. On its part, the United States has already listed the two terrorist outfits.
Recalling that Pakistan has "consistently advocated sustained engagement with Afghanistan", Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad stressed that the Taliban sanctions regime must not "fall prey to political considerations of Council members".
Specifically, travel-ban-exemption requests remain crucial for meaningful engagement, he said, recalling the recent quadrilateral meeting between Pakistan, China, Iran, and the Russian Federation in Dushanbe, "where we agreed on result-oriented engagement" with Afghanistan's interim authorities.
Urging international engagement with clear objectives, reciprocal steps and a "realistic road map guided by dialogue and diplomacy", he underscored: "Isolation and disengagement serves no one's interest."
He also said that "Continued restrictions on (Afghan) women and girls are inconsistent with Islamic traditions and norms of Muslim society."
With conflict in Afghanistan now having ended, many Afghans, whom Pakistan had hosted for decades, have been repatriated in a dignified, phased, and orderly manner, the Pakistani envoy said. Pakistan has also instituted a liberal visa regime that enables a large number of Afghans to be in Pakistan, legally, for various purposes, including family links, education, medical, and business.
"While we will continue to extend all possible assistance to our Afghan brothers and sisters, the international community must shoulder its responsibility and take the necessary steps to ameliorate the conditions and share this burden more equitably," he said.