Arab News

Pakistan confirms Indian invite to meeting on Afghanista­n, but not participat­ion

India offers to host November gathering of national security advisers

- Saima Shabbir Islamabad

Pakistan’s foreign office has said Islamabad had received an invitation from India to attend a national security advisers’ meeting on Afghanista­n in New Delhi next month but had not yet taken a decision on whether it would participat­e.

India’s invite to Pakistani National Security Adviser Dr. Moeed Yusuf comes at a time of high tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbors and longtime foes.

If the talks go ahead, it would be the first meeting on Afghanista­n to be convened by India since the Taliban captured power in August. Pakistan, China, Iran, Russia, and Tajikistan have reportedly also been asked to attend the discussion­s planned for Nov. 10 to 11.

On Monday, Pakistani foreign office spokespers­on, Asim Iftikhar, said: “There is the invitation. There is no decision yet.”

Pakistan and India have a longstandi­ng dispute over the Himalayan region of Kashmir, which they both rule in part but claim in full. They have fought two wars over

the region.

India was a key supporter of the ousted regime in Kabul and as both Pakistan and China become key players in a Taliban-ruled Afghanista­n, its nervousnes­s has increased, analysts say.

India has bitter memories of the previous Taliban stint in power from 1996 to 2001 and the group’s links to Pakistan.

An Indian Airlines plane was hijacked in 1999 and ultimately landed in Kandahar in southern Afghanista­n. New Delhi freed three senior Pakistani militants in its jails in exchange for the return of the passengers and the Taliban allowed the hijackers and the released prisoners to go to Pakistan.

But over the past year, as the Taliban emerged as a dominant force in Afghanista­n and US-brokered negotiatio­ns began in Doha, Indian diplomats had opened a line with the group.

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