Pakistan pledges Rs 5b for Afghans

-FM has paid day-long visit to Kabul for ‘high-level’ talks on bilateral relations
-Discussions focuses on facilitating people-to-people interaction, trade, transit, connectivity
between two nations
-Qureshi is third FM after those of Qatar, Uzbekistan to visit since Taliban took power

Asghar Ali Mubarak

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi announced on Thursday that Pakistan will give humanitarian assistance worth Rs5 billion to Afghanistan.
Speaking to the media in Islamabad after a day-long visit to Kabul, the minister said: “If they need medicines at hospitals or whatever else their priorities are, they will tell us and we will be ready to give them humanitarian assistance in-kind.”
During the press conference, Qureshi said that the Afghan government recognised and were “thankful” for how Pakistan had helped them in times of difficulty and the way the country had housed refugees for decades.
“Right now there is a transition, there are challenges and to overcome that, Pakistan will play whatever role it needs to play,” he said.
The foreign minister said that the high-level delegation that accompanied him on the trip also included officials from different ministries and institutions. “The point of taking the delegation was so that after the main discussion, they would break off into sub-groups and hammer out the details of different issues related to visas, trade and border movement.”
He said that to follow-up on the issues discussed during today’s meet, a Taliban delegation will visit Islamabad in the next few days.
Qureshi said that the Taliban leadership also assured their complete support on projects of interest, including the CASA-1000 project, the TAPI gas pipeline project and the Transnational Railway project.
Commenting on various other decisions made during the meeting, the minister said that Pakistan authorities would no longer require Afghans crossing the border to obtain a “gate pass” from the interior ministry.
He said that Pakistan will allow the duty-free import of fruits and vegetables from Afghanistan to facilitate bilateral trade and border crossings will remain open 24/7 for trade.
He also announced that Afghan businessmen will now be able to get a visa-on-arrival, adding that the embassy in Kabul had also been authorised to issue five-year visas to businessmen.
Qureshi also said that the Afghan leadership had assured the Pakistani delegation that it would not allow anyone to use its soil against Pakistan, including the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA).
Earlier in the day, Qureshi had arrived in Kabul, leading a high-level delegation to meet with Afghan officials and leaders on bilateral relations and ways to strengthen cooperation, the Foreign Office (FO) said in a statement.
Footage showed Qureshi disembarking the plane, followed by Inter-Services Intelligence chief Lieutenant General Faiz Hameed. They were received by Afghanistan’s Acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi and Pakistan Ambassador to Kabul Mansoor Ahmad Khan at the airport’s tarmac.
Later, Afghan Deputy Prime Minister Abdus Salam Hanafi hosted a luncheon in honour of Qureshi and his delegation. A large number of members of the Afghan interim cabinet were present on the occasion.
Hanafi welcomed the foreign minister to Kabul, while Qureshi thanked the Taliban leadership for their “warm hospitality”, according to an FO statement.
In his remarks, Foreign Minister Qureshi said Pakistan was determined to help the Afghan people to save them from an economic crisis.