Despite best efforts to reset ties between Pakistan and Afghanistan, major breakthroughs are rare. At root lies mistrust, which thrives on misperception about each other. These should be overcome, should the two countries really want to move forward.
These thoughts came in a seminar “Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations: Exploring the Way Forward”, which PIPS organized with the support of Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES), on 4 October 2018, in Islamabad. The seminar was discussed with the objective of discussing the way forward as new government took power in Pakistan.
Human rights activist Marvi Sirmid spoke about the status of Afghan refugees in Pakistan. She wondered why nothing has been done for them even though third generation is
Marvi Sirmed also lamented the negligible presence of women in the Afghanistan Pakistan Action Plan for Peace and Solidarity (APAPPS) working groups. She called for including more women in a framework that seeks a sustainable solution on Afghanistan.
Senior Journalist Rahimullah Yousafzai, who has deep insight on Pak-Afghan developments, said when Ashraf Ghani became Afghanistan’s president, there was a sense of optimism in Pakistan. He came to Pakistan where he interacted with civil and military officials. Yet, he hinted, there has been little progress so far.
He suggested that Pakistan should strike friendship with all ethnic groups, instead of Pashtuns only; that it should engage Afghan government. Above all, he argued the relations between the two should be bilateral, so that they understand each other; this is important given the involvement and interest of many other countries.
He pointed that cricket, music, arts and educational diplomacy too require consideration; finally, he said, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) poses a common threat to both countries; the two can therefore cooperate against ISIS.
The conference also touched upon the new dimension of ‘religion diplomacy’. Pakistani and Afghan religious
He shared the scope of Pakistan-Afghanistan relations is wide; there are multidimensional issues. And yet, he said, the relation is not much part of political discourse on both sides. He suggested that “we need to interact within ourselves, instead of with each other only.”
He further said that Pakistan and Afghanistan needed to engage with each other with sincerity and honesty focusing on people of both the nations and overcoming the existing misunderstandings.
However, he also shared that because of several wide-ranging high-level visits from both sides, especially because of the formulation of comprehensive Afghanistan Pakistan Action Plan for Peace and Solidarity (APAPPS), the blame game from both sides on the media has substantially reduced.
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