PM to visit Afghanistan tomorrow for enhancing mutual ties

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan will embark on his maiden trip to Kabul on Thursday (tomorrow) to meet Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani, Islamabad's Ambassador to Afghanistan Mansoor Ahmed Khan

News Desk

News Desk

November 18, 2020

2 min read
PM to visit Afghanistan tomorrow for enhancing mutual ties

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan will embark on his maiden trip to Kabul on Thursday (tomorrow) to meet Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani, Islamabad’s Ambassador to Afghanistan Mansoor Ahmed Khan confirmed on Wednesday.

@PakEmbKabul,” Khan said in a tweet.

Imran will be accompanied by Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Advisor on Commerce and Investment Abdul Razak Dawood and senior officials, Radio Pakistan said.

According to Radio Pakistan, the prime minister’s schedule includes a meeting with the Afghan president, delegation-level talks between the countries followed by a joint press statement. The focus of the visit, it said, would be on further strengthening of bilateral relations, the peace talks and regional economic development and connectivity.

This will be the premier’s first visit to Kabul after assuming office in August 2018. The visit is part of regular high-level exchanges between two countries, Radio Pakistan said, and comes a year after Ghani visited Pakistan on PM Imran’s invitation.

Afghanistan’s Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesperson Gran Hewad had announced the visit last week, claiming it would focus on the ongoing Afghan peace process, as well as efforts to strengthen political, security, trade, and economic ties.

Hewad also confirmed that Ghani had extended an invitation to Imran during a telephonic conversation in October this year.

The visit comes at a crucial juncture as intra-Afghan talks which began in September made little headway with continued violence in the war-torn country making the process further complicated.

The visit also follows the US announcement to draw down its troop levels in Afghanistan to 2,500 by January 15, 2021, raising concerns about the potential impact on the ongoing peace talks between the insurgents and Kabul. The US currently has some 4,500 troops stationed in Afghanistan.

Imran has long maintained that there can be no military solution to the Afghan conflict, advocating dialogue. In recent months, he has stressed that the people of Afghanistan should embrace this opportunity for a political solution, adding that peace and stability in Afghanistan would be beneficial for all of South Asia and would boost trade and economic cooperation between Kabul and Islamabad.

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