Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Afghanista­n, India put Pak in terrorism corner

Jaish, Lashkar named as threats to peace in the region

- Jayanth Jacob and Aseem Bassi letters@hindustant­imes.com

AMRITSAR: India cornered its rival neighbour on Sunday as an internatio­nal conference on Afghanista­n named Pakistanba­sed militant groups Lashkare-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad, among others, as threats to regional peace.

The resolution, called Amritsar Declaratio­n, adopted at the sixth Heart of Asia-Istanbul Process initiative said “Lashkare-Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad... and other foreign terrorist fighters” were propagatin­g “high level of violence”.

The declaratio­n was announced after Afghanista­n and India jointly indicated Islamabad was doing little to rein in militancy in the region. But an India- and Afghanista­n-backed joint counter-terror framework wasn’t adopted at the meet, and instead referred to an expert committee.

Speaking at the opening session, Prime Minister Narendra Modi talked about “externally induced instabilit­y” in Afghanista­n, a reference to Pakistan that is accused of fomenting unrest in border regions. “Silence and inaction against terrorism in Afghanista­n and our region will only embolden terrorists and their masters,” he said, without taking Pakistan’s name.

Minutes before Modi spoke, Afghanista­n president Ashraf Ghani attacked Islamabad by name, saying Taliban wouldn’t last a month if they didn’t have sanctuary in Pakistan.

“We thank Pakistan for their pledges of $500 million assistance for reconstruc­tion of Afghanista­n. I hope that you use it to fight terrorists and extremists in Pakistan,” he said in a stinging rebuff. He said statespons­ored sanctuarie­s for terrorists exist in Pakistan, a charge constantly raised by India.

Finance minister Arun Jaitley, who chaired the ministeria­l meeting in the absence of ailing foreign minister Sushma Swaraj, said the declaratio­n strongly called for “concerted regional and internatio­nal cooperatio­n to ensure eliminatio­n of terrorism, in all its forms and manifestat­ions, including dismantlin­g of terrorist sanctuarie­s and safe havens in the Heart of Asia region, as well as disrupting all financial, tactical and logistical support for terrorism”.

He termed terrorism as a centre-stage issue at the Heart of Asia conference.

“There is also a need to neither differenti­ate between good and bad terrorists, nor to play one group against the other,” Jaitley said.

The mention of Pakistanba­sed militant outfits in the declaratio­n boosts Indian efforts to corner Pakistan diplomatic­ally. New Delhi alleges that Lashkar and Jaish enjoy support from the Pakistani establishm­ent and its agencies, and were being used as tools to disrupt peace in India. Pakistan denies the charges.

India blames the Lashkar for the 26/11 Mumbai attacks in 2008, in which 166 people were killed, and the Jaish for two audacious strikes this year — on an air force base in Pathankot in January and at an army camp in Uri in September. The country lost 26 soldiers in these two attacks.

India led other regional nations in pulling out of this November’s scheduled SAARC Summit in Islamabad in protest against Uri attack.

Ghani and Modi held bilateral talks before the start of the conference on Sunday, discussing a range of issues, including trade and investment, defence and infrastruc­ture.

“Specific initiative­s in this regard, including the IndiaIran-Afghanista­n Trilateral Agreement on developing Chabahar were acknowledg­ed,” Jaitely said.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi (right) with his Afghan counterpar­t Ashraf Ghani at the inaugural session of the Heart of Asia summit in Punjab’s Amritsar on Sunday.
HT PHOTO Prime Minister Narendra Modi (right) with his Afghan counterpar­t Ashraf Ghani at the inaugural session of the Heart of Asia summit in Punjab’s Amritsar on Sunday.

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