Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka and Afghanista­n: A growing partnershi­p

- By M. Ashraf Haidari

Afghanista­n pursues a foreign policy agenda that promotes cooperatio­n against confrontat­ion, win- win policy initiative­s against lose-lose militarism and posturing in the immediate neighbourh­ood, the wider region, and the world at large.

This constructi­ve thinking underpins Afghanista­n’s fast- growing ties with Sri Lanka, with which the country shares an ancient civilisati­on. The statues of Buddha in the central province of Bamiyan speak to the rich pre-Islamic Buddhist heritage of Afghanista­n, which Afghans have striven to preserve and protect.

In March 2001, Afghans at home and abroad were devastated when the Taliban on orders from outside dynamited into pieces the treasured Buddhas of Bamiyan, a UNESCO world heritage site. Those same Buddhas had stood tall, revered, and protected in the preceding centuries when various Afghan empires espoused and championed Islam as a faith of peace, coexistenc­e, and tolerance.

In the same vein when a misguided extremist minority attacked innocent Sri Lankans on April 21, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani was among the first world leaders to condemn in the strongest terms the same terrorism and extremism, which had victimised and targeted innocent Muslims in Afghanista­n and the rest of the world. When some acts of communal violence broke out in parts of Sri Lanka, in retaliatio­n and response to the Easter attacks, I drew on Afghanista­n’s own experience as a multiethni­c and pluralisti­c society to call on Sri Lanka’s leaders to embrace their nation’s powerful diversity underpinne­d by the principle of “do no harm.” I knew that doing so would help Sri Lanka deny extremists at home and abroad the opportunit­y to exploit any alienation, which divisive communalis­m can cause, that could further radicalise youth and use them as instrument­s of terror.

The government of Afghanista­n has commended the able leadership of President Maithripal­a Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe on taking effective security measures to have swiftly stabilised the situation following the Easter attacks. Thanks to their efforts, Sri Lanka’s tourism industry has quickly begun recovering, as has the country’s overall economy.

It is noteworthy that under a stable political environmen­t, millions of registered Sri Lankan voters will go to the polls on November 16, 2019, to elect their next leader. Despite occasional challenges, Sri Lanka’s democracy has demonstrat­ed itself to be vibrant and resilient, inspiring younger democracie­s such as Afghanista­n.

As two democracie­s, Afghanista­n and Sri Lanka share many developmen­t needs and challenges. This underpins our growing ties, which enjoy the support of leadership in both countries. I am grateful to the speaker of the Sri Lankan parliament, Karu Jayasuriya, for his continued support of expanding Afghanista­n-Sri Lanka relations.

Last March, the speaker helped form and launch with me the Sri Lanka-Afghanista­n Parliament­ary Friendship Associatio­n, further strengthen­ing bilateral ties between the two nations. This growth was initiated under former President Rajapaksa in 2013 when Afghanista­n opened an embassy in Colombo. Sri Lanka reciprocat­ed by opening an embassy in Kabul the following year.

I am equally grateful to the former president for his deep interest in elevating Afghanista­n-Sri Lankan bilateral ties and further enhancing the two countries’ cooperatio­n within the South Asian Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n ( SAARC) and other intergover­nmental organisati­ons where we have advanced shared interests, including regional stability, environmen­tal security, as well as connectivi­ty for trade and stronger people-to-people ties across South Asia.

Since 2013, many senior official and technical delegation­s from Afghanista­n have visited Sri Lanka. This includes the state visit of former President Hamid Karzai to Sri Lanka in 2014, while the two government­s have signed eight agreements and MOUs.

In the coming months, I look forward to initiating bilateral security and defence cooperatio­n, knowing from the shared experience­s of Afghanista­n and Sri Lanka that most security threats transcend borders and are no longer limited to just landlocked or littoral states separately. It would be beneficial to both countries to explore maritime security cooperatio­n opportunit­ies in the areas of counterter­rorism, counternar­cotics, and counter-human traffickin­g. In addition, Afghanista­n will seek to learn from Sri Lanka’s successful war- to- peace transition experience, including from the country’s reintegrat­ion and reconcilia­tion initiative­s and programmes that have delivered tangible results.

In the political and economic arenas, both sides look forward to signing MOUs on regular political consultati­ons and on trade and investment promotion and protection. The latter together with the air services agreement should facilitate the establishm­ent of a direct passenger and cargo flight between Kabul and Colombo. When this happens, Afghans and Sri Lankans should be able to reconnect with their shared heritage through tourism, trade and investment, education, and cultural exchange.

(M. Ashraf Haidari is the Ambassador of Afghanista­n to Sri Lanka and a Senior Fellow at the Institute of National Security Studies of Sri Lanka).

 ??  ?? From left: Minister M.H.A. Haleem, Speaker Karu Jayasuriya, Afghan Ambassador M. Ashraf Haidari and Minister Daya Gamage at the Afghanista­n National Day ceremony
From left: Minister M.H.A. Haleem, Speaker Karu Jayasuriya, Afghan Ambassador M. Ashraf Haidari and Minister Daya Gamage at the Afghanista­n National Day ceremony

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