PM Khan says ready to work with Afghanistan’s Ghani for regional peace 

PM Khan says ready to work with Afghanistan’s Ghani for regional peace 
In this handout picture released by Pakistan's Press Information Department (PID) on June 27, 2019, visiting Afghan President Ashraf Ghani (L) talks with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan during a meeting in Islamabad. (AFP)
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Updated 10 March 2020
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PM Khan says ready to work with Afghanistan’s Ghani for regional peace 

PM Khan says ready to work with Afghanistan’s Ghani for regional peace 
  • Pakistan reaffirmed its support for ‘Afghan-led and Afghan-owned’ peace solution
  • Islamabad expresses hope that Afghan leaders would resolve their differences for the sake of peace

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan expressed his willingness to work for regional peace with President Ashraf Ghani, following the Afghan leader’s swearing in to a second term on Monday.

“I want to congratulate Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani & look forward to working with him. Pakistan will do everything it possibly can to bring peace and stability in our region,” Khan in said in a Twitter post.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s Foreign Office reaffirmed in a statement its support for “a peaceful, stable, united, sovereign, democratic and prosperous Afghanistan, at peace with itself and with its neighbors.”

It said that the signing of the US-Taliban peace agreement in Doha on Feb. 29 has created “a historic opportunity for the people of Afghanistan and a pathway to intra-Afghan negotiations.”

Pakistan, the statement read, will “continue to facilitate the Afghan peace and reconciliation process” through a comprehensive and inclusive solution that is “Afghan-led and Afghan-owned.”

“We hope the Afghan leaders would proceed with wisdom and foresight, eschew blame-games, resolve mutual differences, and unite in the supreme interest of their country,” Foreign Office read, as Afghanistan witnessed two oath-takings on Monday, with Ghani’s rival, Abdullah Abdullah, also announcing himself the country’s new ruler.

While Ghani’s ceremony was taking place at the presidential palace in Kabul, Abdullah held a separate one in an adjacent compound

The two leaders have been sharing power — Ghani as president and Abdullah as chief executive — since 2014.

Afghanistan’s electoral commission last month announced that Ghani had won over 50 percent of September’s presidential vote, but Abdullah rejected the result and declared himself the winner.