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Afghanistan is one of main partners of Turkmenistan, says Turkmen president

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(Last Updated On: October 25, 2022)

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Turkmenistan’s President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow who arrived in Kabul on Thursday emphasized on the settlement of disputes through diplomatic challenges of Afghanistan and the United Nations intervenes.

In a press conference in Presidential Palace with President Ashraf Ghani, President Berdimuhamedow said that his country is ready to cooperate in Afghan government Peace Talks process and sending a political representative to the country.

“Turkmenistan as a neutral country is ready to cooperate for the Afghan government negotiations and we can send your political representative to the country of our brothers.” President Berdimuhamedow said.

President Berdimuhamedow stressed on continuation of economic and security cooperation with Afghanistan, saying the implementation of the TAPI project will begin this year.

According to the feasibility of the project, the 1735 km long TAPI pipeline will start from the eastern region of Turkmenistan, where the largest gas fields are situated, and, after passing through the territory of Afghanistan and Pakistan will reach settlement of Fazilka (India) on the Pakistani-Indian border.

Turkmenistan, especially under the new President Berdimuhamedow, has played a small, but positive role in Afghanistan’s development and reconstruction. Ashgabat has delivered humanitarian aid to Afghanistan and forgiven much of Kabul’s debt for Turkmen electrical power. Turkmenistan continues to supply Afghanistan with energy at a deep discount, and Ashgabat has reconstructed a portion of the railway that will connect the two countries.

Afghanistan and Turkemnistan representatives have signed five agreements on combat against money laundering, economic, technology cooperation and sports in this meeting.

In the meantime, President Ghani said that Turkmenistan makes power export to Afghanistan five times more and railway construction work will shortly begin Between Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.

President Ashraf Ghani reaffirmed the Afghan government’s commitment to strengthen bilateral ties with neighboring Turkmenistan.

The deteriorating security situation in northern parts of the country, President Ghani said, might have affected the progress of work on large economic projects but he said the government has taken serious measures to improve security across Afghanistan, particularly in the northern provinces.

Upon the completion of these projects, President Ghani said the western province of Herat will turn into a transit zone and Afghanistan will get connected to Caspian Sea through Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Turkmenistan lies along the northwest frontier of Afghanistan, adjacent to the Afghan provinces of Herat, Badghis, Faryab, and Jowzjan. The 462-mile (744-km) border sits in a plain that extends from northern Afghanistan into the Karakum Desert of Turkmenistan.

Turkmenistan’s relations with Afghanistan have been limited in recent decades owing to the former’s isolation under the rule of the eccentric communist dictator Saparmurat Niyazov.

 

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US asks IEA to ensure Afghan soil not used by terrorists

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(Last Updated On: April 19, 2024)

The US State Department on Thursday asked the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) to ensure that Afghanistan is not used to support terrorist groups, movement of terrorists or acts of terrorism.

A State Department spokesman told Geo News that Washington has “been very clear that we will judge the Taliban (IEA) by what they do, not what they say.”

“The Taliban (IEA) wants international legitimacy. This requires the Taliban (IEA) to meet their commitments to the international community,” the official said.

The spokesperson said the most enduring interest for the US in Afghanistan was to ensure that it never again became a safe haven for terrorists, especially for those who wished harm to the US or its partners or allies.

“We are in regular communication with Pakistani leaders as a part of our partnership on counterterrorism issues. We continue to discuss Afghanistan in detail, including through our annual counterterrorism dialogue and other bilateral consultations,” the official said.

Islamabad has time and again urged Kabul to take meaningful action against terrorists using Afghan soil to launch attacks inside Pakistan.

However, the IEA has repeatedly rejected claims of militant groups in the country and have said they will not allow any group to threaten a country from Afghanistan.

On Tuesday, the Pakistan Army’s top commanders were briefed on how terrorist groups operating from Afghanistan pose a threat to regional and global security, besides acting as proxies against Pakistan and its economic interests, especially the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

A day ago, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said security forces had killed seven terrorists trying to infiltrate the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in the North Waziristan district.

In a statement, the military’s media wing had said the security forces on April 16 had detected a movement of a group of seven terrorists near the border in the Spinkai area of Ghulam Khan in the tribal district, Pakistan’s The News reported.

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Over 6,000 acres of land cleared of poppies in Badakhshan

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(Last Updated On: April 19, 2024)

Badakhshan Police Command says it has cleared more than 6,000 acres of poppy fields in northern Badakhshan province.

The anti-narcotics department of Badakhshan Police Command says that since the beginning of the campaign to destroy the poppy fields in this province, they have cleared more than 6,000 acres of land.

According to these officials, poppies have however been planted in more than 10 districts this year.

The anti-narcotics department of the Badakhshan Police Command says that the campaign to destroy the poppy plantations started two months ago and continues.

According to the officials, during this period, 6,300 acres of land has been cleared.

Some of the farmers whose fields were destroyed say that poppy is more profitable than other agricultural products, but now that their land has been cleared, they want alternative crops.

According to the officials, Kishim, Argo, Darayimand and Jurm districts are among the districts where poppies are cultivated.

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MSF ‘deeply concerned’ over new phase of deportations of Afghans from Pakistan

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(Last Updated On: April 19, 2024)

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said Wednesday it was deeply concerned for the rights and welfare of Afghan refugees in Pakistan in the wake of the recent announcement by Islamabad that it plans to start Phase Two of the deportation campaign.

Pakistan is home to an estimated 3.7 million Afghans, and a reported 500,000 have crossed the border so far.

Many Afghans living in Pakistan have been there for decades and have spent more time in the country than their country of origin, without any legal recourse to remain in the only place they can effectively call “home”.

For many Afghans, Islamabad’s “repatriation” campaign means packing up their belongings and carrying them on a horse, cart, car and bus and traveling en masse to a country that is already struggling with widespread poverty, inadequate health services and increased restrictions on women, MSF said in a statement.

The second phase of the deportations leaves an estimated 800,000 Pakistan-issued Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders vulnerable to return, while phase three is expected to result in the further deportation of UNHCR-issued Proof of Registration (PoR) card holders, MSF said.

MSF first started working in Pakistan in 1986, and today provides much-needed medical care to people in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh provinces.

The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) and UN agencies estimate that more than half a million people have been deported from Pakistan or voluntarily returned to Afghanistan in the past six months.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said last month that nearly two million Afghan refugees are living in Pakistan and that the agency needs $368 million this year to assist these people.

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