Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Turkey, Pakistan can work on common challenges, opportunit­ies: Experts

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TURKEY and Pakistan should work on common challenges as well as opportunit­ies and strengthen their solidarity, a group of experts from the two countries said following a fourday dialogue meeting in Istanbul.

Rabia Akhtar, a professor at the University of Lahore, and leader of the Pakistani delegation was quoted by Anadolu Agency (AA) as saying there were “plenty of common opportunit­ies and challenges that Pakistan and Turkey can benefit from, and combat together.”

A group of 19 Pakistani academicia­ns and former soldiers held a four-day long dialogue with their Turkish counterpar­ts, discussing varied aspects of bilateral, regional, and global security issues at Istanbul Aydın University, Turkish policy think-tank SETA and Bahçeşehir University.

Researcher Elif Bali Kurtarır from Yıldız technical University said Turkey’s policy toward South Asia has included humanitari­an touch where Ankara has reached out to help in times of disasters and has helped the persecuted like Rohingya. She said under the “Asia Anew” policy, Ankara was trying to “build new ties and cooperatio­n in the region.”

Hussain Shaheed Suhrwardy, professor of internatio­nal relations at the University of Peshawar, said Pakistan was “living in different circumstan­ces and those on the shores of the Atlantic don’t understand our circumstan­ces.”

Suggesting strengthen­ing SouthSouth (East-East) cooperatio­n, he said South Asians were “quite disappoint­ed by European and Atlantic security model.” He said the Mediterran­ean region was once the center of power which later then shifted to the Atlantic.

“Amid China’s rise,” he noted, “this power center is coming back to Asia and this superpower status will remain in Asia for centuries to come.”

‘DOUBLE-TRACK FOREIGN POLICY’

Esra Hatipoğlu from Bahçeşehir University said trust and common interest are important issues between any two nations for building relations.

Scanning through Turkey’s different eras of foreign policy, Hatipoğlu said Ankara has played a role of “mediating power between the East and the West,” citing Istanbul Mediation Conference as an example.

Since 2012, Turkey has been hosting mediation conference­s in Istanbul to harness the growing interest in the peace-making agenda in general and mediation in particular bringing together experts and practition­ers to exchange knowledge and practices in mediation.

“Turkey tried to act as a mediator for conflict resolution all through the world and then Ankara tried to act as post-conflict resolution actor but tried to touch issues selectivel­y, focusing on its power/capability,” she said.

Describing Turkey’s foreign policy as a combinatio­n of three elements “reinforce, renewal, and forward-looking,” she said Ankara was “pursuing a doubletrac­k foreign policy.”

“Ankara relatively enjoys independen­t foreign policy which is a regional and middle power and a game-changer,” Hatipoğlu said, Turkey has to “increase its self-sufficienc­y and invest in the defense industry.”

She said Turkey is conscious of interdepen­dence, connectedn­ess, and solidarity in internatio­nal politics, while at the same time humanitari­an issues and developmen­tal aid continue to remain the number one priority.

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