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India, Afghanistan plan air cargo link over Pakistan

The Eagle

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India, Afghanistan plan air cargo link over Pakistan

By Reuters
Published: December 3, 2016

AMRITSAR: India and Afghanistan are likely to announce an air cargo service on Saturday to help increase trade that both say is stymied because of their tense political relations with Pakistan that lies between them.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi were meeting in the northern Indian city of Amritsar, a short distance from the Pakistan border, for the Heart of Asia conference aimed at stabilising Afghanistan.

Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan have gone to war three times and remain bitter foes while ties between Pakistan and Afghanistan have become strained despite their shared religious and cultural identities.

Officials say the focus of the air cargo service is to improve landlocked Afghanistan’s connectivity to key markets abroad and boost the growth prospects of its fruit and carpet industries while it battles a deadly Taliban insurgency.

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Afghanistan depends on the Pakistani port of Karachi for its foreign trade. It is allowed to send a limited amount of goods overland through Pakistan into India, but imports from India are not allowed along this route.

Afghan director general for macro fiscal policies Khalid Payenda said the potential for trade with India, the largest market in the region, was far greater than allowed by land and so the two countries had decided to use the air route.

“That would be air cargo between Afghanistan and India. We have a lot of potential for trade on both sides. On our side, it’s mostly fruit and dried fruit and potentially through India to other places for products like carpets and others.”

He said that a joint venture involving an Afghan and an Indian cargo firm would be set up and that the two governments were working to set up infrastructure at Kabul and Delhi airports.

An Indian government source attending the meeting in Amritsar said air cargo route details were still being worked out and could include Kandahar as a point of origin for shipping fruit directly to India.

Indian foreign ministry official Gopal Baglay, who oversees Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran, said several proposals were being discussed to improve Afghanistan’s trade and transport links.

“There have been very many ideas on how to enhance connectivity, overcome current challenges and also expand the trade basket,” he said. Pakistan’s top foreign policy adviser, Sartaj Aziz, will be attending the conference on Sunday.

Ties with India have deteriorated further in recent months after a series of attacks on Indian military bases in the disputed region of Kashmir, which New Delhi says have either been carried out by militants sneaking in from Pakistan or orchestrated by groups based there.

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Pakistan denies stoking violence in Kashmir and says India must open talks on the future of the revolt-torn Muslim majority region. Indian officials said no talks with Pakistan were scheduled on the sidelines of the Amritsar conference.

Afghanistan’s ties with Pakistan have also become strained after a series of violent attacks, several of them in the capital Kabul, that it said showed Pakistan had failed to rein in the militant groups operating from its soil.

“Unless we take a collective measure to fight terrorism, to fight the breeding ground for terrorism, the safe sanctuary, we will not be able to bring peace and stability either to Afghanistan or to anywhere else in the region, including India,” said Afghan ambassador to India Shaida M. Abdali.

Pakistan says it is itself a victim of terrorism and says India is using its close ties with Afghanistan to stir trouble in its restive Baluchistan province.
 
Given Afghanistan's hostile attitude, and aggression towards Pakistan, Pakistan should take this very seriously, and give an amicable response.

It is planned yet Pakistan's observations are awaited. Yes, Afghanistan and India both has to show a visible and noticeable change in attitude.
 
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Hateful remarks? Which part is hateful.


You are no position to say such things. Especially when at least 5 million of your fellow Afghans are living in and being sustained by Pakistan. With many more millions wanting to come and settle in Pakistan too. We have been feeding and looking after your people for more than 40 years. If we permanently seal our border with Afghanistan then we would finish off your country without a bullet being fired.
 
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You are no position to say such things. Especially when at least 5 million of your fellow Afghans are living in and being sustained by Pakistan. With many more millions wanting to settle in Pakistan too. We have been feeding and looking after your people for more than 40 years. If we permanently seal our border with Afghanistan then we would finish off your country without a bullet being fired.

I still don't see why are you guys making such a big fuss? You dont allow Afghanistan and India to do trade via land, so we make an air corridor, that simple.to do commerce.

Stop with this looking after us part, you did what you thought was in your interest period.
 
Its the same india that denied us aerial route to then East Pakistan right and then complained oh you are killing Hindus in East Pakistan?

I would say don't permit them. If they want to sell onions to each other ....... then they should know it depends on us and our pride, respect and peace is much more worthier than their onions, tomatoes and dry fruits.
 

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