Maleeha says Taliban have safe havens in Afghanistan

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  • Envoy says Pakistan expects gratitude, not hostility from Afghan govt
  • Tadamichi calls for urgent action to strengthen stability in Afghanistan

Pakistan’s permanent representative to UN Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi has informed the UN Security Council that the safe havens of the Afghan Taliban are inside, not outside, of Afghanistan.

During a debate on Afghanistan, she said that the resilience of the Taliban-led insurgency cannot be explained away by convenient references to external safe havens or support centres. She said that Pakistan was committed not to allow its territory to be used against other countries.

She said that Pakistan’s Zarb-e-Azb and the subsequent Raddul Fassad military operations had succeeded in eliminating terrorist and militant groups from its tribal territory. She told the 15 member council that Pakistan is implementing border controls, including the fencing and monitoring of vulnerable sections of the Pak-Afghan border.

In response to some provocative remarks made by her Afghan counterpart during the debate, she said that as a country that continues to host over two million Afghan refugees, Pakistan expects the gratitude and not hostility from the Afghan government.

The main thrust of Maleeha’s remarks centered around the need for a negotiated end to the Afghan war. She said that it had been Pakistan’s consistent position that peace could be restored only through a negotiated settlement between Kabul and the Tehreek-i-Taliban Afghanistan.

She pointed out that this has also long been the consensus of the international community, noting that a negotiated peace was also backed by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who recently visited Kabul. She said that the promotion of a political settlement and the pursuit of a military solution in Afghanistan were mutually incompatible.

Continued reliance on a military option, or enhancing troop numbers without an accompanying political strategy, would only lead to more violence and bloodshed, Maleeha told the Security Council. “It would not yield a political settlement.” Stressing the need to find a negotiated solution, she said that over the years, Pakistan has done what it can, when asked, to help facilitate such a negotiated settlement.

She referred in this regard to the 2015 Murree talks and efforts under the Quadrilateral Coordination Group (QCG) framework; as also her country’s engagement with the Heart of Asia conference, International Contact Group, Moscow Format, and, most recently, the Kabul process, among others.

But she made it clear that while others could help by promoting a negotiated settlement, peace could only be negotiated when the Afghan parties desired it and eschewed a military solution. She said today there was every reason for the Afghan parties and their friends to pursue the path of a negotiated peace. All of them face a common threat from ISIS and the terrorist groups affiliated with it, she said.

“Among them, the Taliban and the Jamat ul Ahrar target Pakistan from their bases in Afghanistan,” she said. “There is no other country, which will gain more from peace in Afghanistan,” she said. “We are confident that, whatever our differences in the past, in the end, the deep bonds of religion, culture, history and geography between Pakistan and Afghanistan will assert themselves and produce an era of peaceful and mutually beneficial cooperation between our nations.”

In a scathing report, UN’s Special Representative Tadamichi Yamamoto warned that the recent surge of violent attacks in Afghanistan could signal a much worse and more fragile period ahead, as he called for urgent action to strengthen stability, including through improving the government’s credibility, and urged all parties to exercise restraint and avoid violence.

“The months since my last briefing have been unusually tense in Afghanistan,” he said. “Without enhanced efforts by the national unity government to increase political inclusiveness, strengthen accountability, and improve the government’s credibility, particularly in the security sector, we are likely to face more crises in an increasingly fragile environment.”

In his briefing to the council, the senior UN official spoke of the emerging difference following the May 31 terrorist attack in Kabul and warned that violent extremist groups could try to exacerbate the divisions, especially along sectarian lines. Urging all sides to exercise restraint and avoid violence, Yamamoto underscored the need to address the root cause of the issues and reminded national actors that efforts to build consensus and political stability are critical.

On his part, Afghan Ambassador Mahmoud Saikal said reversing the tide against terror was contingent on eliminating support centres beyond the country’s borders that produced, nurtured and empowered terrorists operating in Afghanistan.