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Afghanistan, Pakistan clash at UNSC meeting

Afghanistan, Pakistan clash at UNSC meeting

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21 Jun 2013 - 08:59
Afghanistan, Pakistan clash at UNSC meeting
author avatar
21 Jun 2013 - 08:59

WASHINGTON (PAN): Two ambassadors from Afghanistan traded sharp words on the presence of terrorist safe havens in Pakistan’s tribal belt near the Afghanistan border at a special UN Security Council meeting in Washington on Thursday.

 “The fact remains: so long as terrorist sanctuaries continue to exist in Pakistan’s soil and some elements continue to use terrorism as an instrument of foreign policy, peace will not prevail, neither in Afghanistan, nor in the region,” Afghan ambassador to the UN, Zahir Tanin, told the 15-member body.

 “We also are very concerned with ongoing border shelling; this constitutes a serious threat to Afghan sovereignty and the prospect of friendly relations between our two countries,” he said.

“I reject most emphatically Ambassador Tanin’s argument – root, trunk and branch – that terrorist sanctuaries exist in Pakistan and some elements continue to use terrorism as an instrument of foreign policy,” Pakistani Ambassador to the UN, Masood Khan, said in response to Tanin’s remarks.

 “No, sir, this is not true; and you know this is not true. And this is not good diplomacy,” Khan told UNSC meeting on Afghanistan.

 “By using such arguments, you cast aspersions on our sincerity. In Pakistan, we do not operate as elements, but as a whole, as one state. All institutions of the state have consensus that terrorism is a threat to both Pakistan and Afghanistan and therefore both countries should work together to eliminate this scourge,” Khan said.

He claimed he has not rebutted Tanin’s argument as a tit for tat response or to settle scores. “I have said this to highlight that terrorists operate on both sides of the porous border.  Many attacks against Pakistan are planned on Afghan soil,” he said.

 “That is why we need more aggressive policing and surveillance of the border. This will also help stop the shelling.  We must not allow terrorists manipulate and divide the people of Afghanistan and Pakistan,” Khan said.

 “This kind of contentious polemic is disingenuous, as Pakistan and Afghanistan communicate through multiple political, military channels to address all bilateral issues,” he added.

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