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Pakistan to ignore APTA, if India not improve ties

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(Last Updated On: October 25, 2022)

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Pakistani Commerce minister says his country will not accept Afghanistan-Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement (APTA) until India improve ties with Pakistan.

Simultaneously with the suggestion of India for membership of trade transit agreement, Pakistan said that India should improve its relation with Pakistan that can gain membership of this agreement.

While opening the exhibition of Pakistan products in Kabul, the Pakistani official, Khuram Dastager warned that Pakistan will not allow any Afghan traders to transfer their goods to India through Pakistan.

Dastager declared that Pakistan has not decided yet about the sharing of APTA project with India.

“India first should make its relation better with Pakistan to gain the membership of APTA” Khuram Dastager said.

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In the meantime, India’s embassy in Kabul announced its complete readiness for expanding trade ties with Afghanistan and joining to PATA agreement via an official letter to Afghanistan government on Monday.

The acting minister of Afghanistan commerce ministry also stressed on regional convergence to improve trade relations.

Mazmal Shinwari, acting minister of commerce said, “The region countries should cooperate with each other to improve their economics and can introduce their goods to the world.”

The APTTA was concluded after years of effort and replaces an outdated agreement dating from 1965. It is a major breakthrough, demonstrating strong economic and political cooperation between the two countries.

To complete implementation, both countries demonstrated their continuing commitment to work together to overcome technical and political obstacles.
Full implementation of the agreement will provide a boost to the economies of both countries by reducing the costs and delays in transport between Pakistan and Afghanistan – and serve as a model for the region.

It will help both countries expand their reach to world markets and improve the competitiveness of Afghanistan’s exports.

It will also help reduce cross-border smuggling, increase government revenues from legitimate trade, and have a multiplier effect as supporting services grow to support increased trade.

Both countries have already expressed interest in extending APTTA’s reach through negotiations with interested countries in Central Asia.

The United States and other partners support APTTA’s role in strengthening regional cooperation and building prosperity.

Pakistan—Afghanistan Transit Trade Agreement (also known as TTA) is a bilateral trade agreement between Pakistan and Afghanistan has been renegotiated several times, with the most recent being signed on 28 October 2010.

This treaty allows Afghanistan access to the dry port of Lahore, and also access to a land route to export goods to India. It does not allow India to use the land route to export goods to Afghanistan.

 

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Girls’ education is a ‘vital issue’ for Afghanistan: Karzai

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(Last Updated On: April 25, 2024)

Former president Hamid Karzai said in a meeting with Iran’s ambassador and special representative, Hassan Kazemi Qomi, that education of girls was a “vital issue” for Afghanistan.

Karzai said he appreciated Iran’s cooperation and its standing with the Afghan people, especially Iran’s contributions to education in Afghanistan.

During the meeting, Karzai said peace and stability in the region are in the interest of all regional countries.

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Uzbekistan’s humanitarian aid arrives in Balkh

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(Last Updated On: April 25, 2024)

A shipment of humanitarian aid from Uzbekistan was handed over on Thursday to the local officials of Balkh province in the trade port of Hairatan.

Local authorities said the aid, which includes flour, oil, wheat, sugar and meat, has been handed over by Uzbekistan’s Surkhandarya governor to the governor of Balkh.

The governor of Surkhandarya stated the purpose of sending this aid was to support the people of Afghanistan and stressed the need for the development of good relations between the two countries.

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Afghanistan’s problems caused more damage to Pakistan than 3 wars with India: Durrani

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(Last Updated On: April 25, 2024)

Islamabad’s special envoy for Afghanistan Asif Durrani said on Wednesday that Pakistan has suffered more due to Afghanistan’s internal situation than Pakistan has suffered in three wars with India in terms of blood spilt and finances drained.

Durrani said at a one-day International Conference titled “Pakistan in the Emerging Geopolitical Landscape”, which was organized by the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI) and the German Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES), that over 80,000 Pakistanis died in the two decades of the War on Terror and that his country was still counting its dead and injured.

“After the withdrawal of NATO forces, it was hoped that peace in Afghanistan would bring peace to the region. However, such expectations were short-lived,” he said.

He also stated that attacks by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant group on Pakistan’s border areas increased by 65 percent, while suicide attacks increased by 500 percent.

“The TTP’s enhanced attacks on Pakistan while using Afghan soil have been a serious concern for Pakistan. Another worrying aspect is the participation of Afghan nationals in these attacks,” he said.

Durrani also said Pakistan had suffered geopolitically since the Soviet Union invaded the neighboring country.

“The post-9/11 world order has negatively impacted Pakistan. Apart from losing 80,000 citizens’ lives, including 8,000 law enforcement agency personnel, the country’s economic opportunity cost is estimated at $150 billion,” Durrani said.

Talking about the future outlook for Pakistan in the regional context, Durrani said that while “our eastern neighbor is likely to continue with its anti-Pakistan pursuits, the western border poses an avoidable irritant in the short to medium term.”

However, he said Pakistan can overcome its difficulties with Afghanistan, including the TTP challenge.

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