The National Assembly’s Standing Committee on States and Frontier Regions observed that NATO should provide funds for the repair and maintenance of the damaged road infrastructure. According to the National Highway Authority, the Nato containers weighing 60-70 tons use the N-5 National Highway , from Karachi to Torkham, and N-25, from Karachi to Chaman, for supplying goods to Nato forces in Afghanistan . They have caused damage of more than Rs110 billion to roads.
Search This Blog
Showing posts with label Af-Pak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Af-Pak. Show all posts
Sunday, 3 July 2011
NATO CAUSED ‘RS:110 BILLION DAMAGE TO ROADS'
Saturday, 25 June 2011
AFGHANISTAN, IRAN, PAKISTAN TO ‘JOINTLY COMBAT TERRORISM’
TEHRAN: The presidents of Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan agreed on Saturday to join forces in combating militancy as they attended a counterterrorism summit in Tehran.
The joint statement by the three neighbours also came hot on the heels of an announcement by US President Barack Obama that Washington will withdraw 33,000 of its 99,000 troops from Afghanistan by the end of next summer. “All sides stressed their commitment to efforts aimed at eliminating extremism, militancy, terrorism, as well as rejecting foreign interference, which is in blatant opposition to the spirit of Islam, the peaceful cultural traditions of the region and its peoples’ interests,” the statement said.
“All sides agreed to continue meeting at foreign, interior, security and economy ministers’ level to prepare a roadmap for the next summit due to be held in Islamabad before the end of 2011,” added the statement carried by Iran’s official IRNA news agency. Afghan President Hamid Karzai and his Iranian and Pakistani counterparts Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Asif Ali Zardari held three-way talks on Friday ahead of a six-nation counterterrorism conference on Saturday.
The three leaders discussed “ways of battling terrorism, extremism and drug trafficking,” IRNA said. In his speech at the opening session of the two-day summit, Karzai said that despite his government’s efforts, militancy was on the rise both in his country and in the region. “Unfortunately, despite all the achievements in the fields of education, infrastructure and reconstruction, not only has Afghanistan not yet achieved peace and security, but terrorism is expanding and threatening more than ever Afghanistan and the region,” the Afghan leader said.
President Zardari said: “Terrorists violate both human and divine values by inflicting death and destruction on fellow human beings. They have no religion.” He said attacks had resulted in the deaths of 35,000 people in Pakistan, 5,000 of them law enforcement personnel, and material damage totaling $67 billion.
In his speech to the opening session, Ahmadinejad again accused the United States of using the September 11, 2001 attacks as a “pretext” for sending troops to the region. “In light of the way it was approached and exploited, September 11 is very much like the Holocaust,” the Iranian leader charged.
“The American government used the attacks as a pretext to occupy two countries, and kill, injure and displace people in the region,” he added. “If the black box of the Holocaust and September 11 is opened, many of the realities will come to light. But unfortunately despite worldwide demand, the American government has not allowed it.” Ahmadinejad has repeatedly courted controversy by questioning the accepted version of both the September 11 attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people in the United States, and the Holocaust.
He has dubbed 9/11 a “big lie” and a “suspect affair” similar to the Nazi Holocaust, which he dismissed as a “myth” shortly after coming to power in 2005, triggering an international outcry. In his message to the counterterrorism conference, which was also attended by the leaders of Iraq, Sudan and Tajikistan, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also spoke out against what he charged was Western abuse of the terrorist threat.
“The diabolical calculation of the dominating powers is to exploit terrorism as a tool to gain their illegitimate aims and they have used it in their plans,” he said in the message which was read out to the conference. “In their view, terrorism is whatever threatens their interests. They consider those who are fighting for their legitimate right against occupiers as terrorists but do not consider their mercenaries and malicious groups who harm innocent people as terrorists.” Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said the next conference of the six nations would be held in Baghdad next year, and a permanent secretariat would be opened in Tehran.
Friday, 24 June 2011
KABUL URGES END TO PAKISTANI BORDER ATTACKS
KABUL: The Afghan government on Friday called for an end to cross-border attacks from Pakistan, warning that such incidents could affect “improving trust and cooperation” between the two wary allies.
“The ministry of foreign affairs of Afghanistan expresses its serious concern about the continuing Pakistani artillery shelling of Afghan villages in Kunar and Nangarhar provinces,” it said.
The ministry said that Pakistani shelling killed four children late Thursday in the northeastern province of Kunar, the latest in a series of incidents. “The Afghan government calls for the immediate cessation of the artillery fire against Afghan villages,” it said. “The continuation of such incidents could adversely affect the spirit of improving trust and cooperation between the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.”
The border between Afghanistan and Pakistan is porous, and relations between the two countries have long been strained over the presence of militants fighting against both governments. Both sides have made a string of claims and counter-claims in recent days.
Last week, Pakistani officials said five people were killed when several hundred militants crossed from Afghanistan and targeted civilians in the Mamoond area of the lawless border tribal district of Bajaur. But Afghan officials denied any attack and accused Pakistani troops of killing six people in a rocket strike in Kunar, as well as other attacks in volatile Kunar and Nangarhar.
The statement came after Afghanistan’s foreign minister Zalmai Rassoul met the Pakistani ambassador to Kabul over the issue Monday. Pakistan had earlier summoned the Afghan charge d’affaires over the dispute.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Visitor Map
Popular Posts
-
ALTAF HUSSAIN ARRESTED IN UK LONDON – The police in London have arrested Altaf Hussain, a UK-based leader of the Mutahidda Qaumi Movem...
-
ISLAMABAD: An intra-court appeal requesting the Supreme Court to suspend its decision of framing contempt charges against Prime Minister Yo...
-
ISLAMABAD: The government of Pakistan and the opposition on Tuesday failed to build consensus on 20 th Amendment bill. Both parties could...
-
ISRAELI AIR STRIKES POUND GAZA AS DEATH TOLL HITS 38 GAZA CITY: An Israeli air strike on Rafah in southern Gaza killed four people ...
-
ISLAMABAD : Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani here on Tuesday said return of Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) and Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI)...
-
LONDON : Police battled to restore order Sunday as rioters went on the rampage in north London , torching vehicles and buildings amid wides...
-
KARACHI : Five dead bodies were recovered from a bus in the Gulshan-e-Iqbal area of Karachi on Wednesday, police sources informed. Accordi...
-
ISLAMABAD: Chief of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan on Tuesday said that the trio of President Asif Zardari, Pakistan Muslim ...
-
ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Rehman Malik on Tuesday said Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) led coalition government respects the Supreme Court ...
-
Rocket-propelled grenade, although the militant group often exaggerates incidents involving foreign troops or Afghan government targets. In...