Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

TERROR CAN’T BE INSTRUMENT OF STATE POLICY, SAYS ABDULLAH ABDULLAH

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

Chief executive of Afghanista­n said differenti­ating between “good and bad terrorists” can have catastroph­ic consequenc­es. He said neighbours should change the policy of using terrorism as an instrument of state policy.

NEW DELHI: The use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy must change, chief executive of Afghanista­n, Abdullah Abdullah, said on Thursday, alluding to extremist safe havens in Pakistan that threaten peace and stability in the region.

Abdullah said differenti­ating between “good and bad terrorists” can have catastroph­ic consequenc­es. He also thanked India for its friendship, and especially for its help in his country’s reconstruc­tion. “The neighbours should change the policy of using terrorism as an instrument of state policy,” he said, responding to a question on how “Pakistan’s mind” can be changed to fight terrorism in the region. The session was chaired by Amar Sinha, a retired diplomat and the country’s former envoy in Kabul.

Terrorism is among the primary challenges Afghanista­n faces as it rebuilds itself following years of a fundamenta­list regime under the Taliban that ended in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. “We will protect our people against Talibanism. We urge all nations affected by terrorism to boost their efforts through intelligen­ce sharing and cooperatio­n,” he said.

Abdullah said he was hopeful about the new South Asia policy announced by US President Donald Trump this year, but said its full impact is yet to be determined. Trump said that American troops will stay in Afghanista­n to help rebuilding efforts while calling on Pakistan to stop harbouring militants.

Abdullah, a doctor-turned-politician, termed Trump’s policy “not time-bound, but condition-based”. Here, too, without naming Islamabad, he said Pakistan had a key role to play for the policy to be successful.

“The full impact (of Trump’s policy) is yet to be seen... There’s no doubt the Taliban is under pressure and that’s why they are targeting cities. The real impact will show itself when the neighbouri­ng countries, where the (terror) sanctuarie­s are, act,” Abdullah said.

Abdullah, who received the second-highest votes in the 2014 presidenti­al polls, holds a special constituti­onal post giving prime ministeria­l powers to recommend crucial policy decisions to president Ashraf Ghani. Abdullah praised “Indian generosity” in the reconstruc­tion of Afghanista­n, listing out assistance in infrastruc­ture, education and trade. “This is why India is a rising world power and not just an emerging regional economy,” he said.

 ??  ?? Today at the Summit: Barack Obama, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Yogi Adityanath, Raman Singh, Naomi Campbell, and more
Today at the Summit: Barack Obama, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Yogi Adityanath, Raman Singh, Naomi Campbell, and more
 ?? SATISH BATE/HT PHOTO ?? ▪ Abdullah Abdullah, chief executive of Afghanista­n.
SATISH BATE/HT PHOTO ▪ Abdullah Abdullah, chief executive of Afghanista­n.

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