Afghan Govt want helps from Pakistan

 Afghanistan Asks Pakistan to Take 'Down to earth Steps' Against Taliban Ahead of US Pullout

The Afghan government's media representative has said his nation needs Pakistan to take "pragmatic strides" to close the Taliban bases and end its help for the guerilla bunch in the wake of the U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan. 


"Afghanistan's requests are exceptionally clear," Dawa Khan Menapal, overseer of Afghanistan's Government Media and Information Center, told VOA. "We as a whole accept that the fear mongers have bases and backing in Pakistan." 


Menapal emphasized Afghan President Ashraf Ghani's case of May 14 when he disclosed to Der Spiegel magazine that the Taliban had gotten coordinations, accounts and enrollment from Pakistan, and that their consultative bodies were named after Pakistani urban communities, for example, "Peshawar Shura, Quetta Shura and Miranshah Shura." 


The verbal fight between the two nations appeared to enter another level in mid-May when the Afghan public safety counsel, Hamdullah Mohib, during a meeting in eastern Nangarhar territory, cautioned the Taliban that Pakistan's knowledge offices would "penance" the Taliban for their own destinations. 


"They neither need you nor will they help [you] to take power," he said. "All they have advised you are completely false. The solitary thing they need from you is that they are forfeiting you for themselves and for their own conflict." 


Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs representative Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri, in a WhatsApp message to VOA, forcefully refuted those claims, calling them "untrustworthy articulations" and "ridiculous allegations." 


"Pakistan has passed on its genuine worries to the Afghan side by making a solid demarche with the represetative of Afghanistan in Islamabad," he said. 


On May 17, Pakistan's Foreign Ministry, in an explanation, cautioned that the Afghan initiative's allegations could "disintegrate trust and vitiate the climate between the two charitable nations and negligence the productive job being played by Pakistan in working with the Afghan harmony measure." 


Taliban bases 


Relations between the two Muslim neighbors have throughout the long term been portrayed by shared doubt over charges that Pakistan has been giving place of refuge to the Afghan Taliban. 


The Afghan government presently asserts that Pakistan's inability to satisfy its guarantees of containing the Taliban has added to the ceaseless pattern of brutality in Afghanistan. 


Afghan media representative Menapal said Pakistan had vowed to close the bases and "end the emotionally supportive network for the Taliban." 


Haris Nawaz, a resigned Pakistani brigadier, countered the charge, saying, "All their [Taliban] refuges and safe spots inside Pakistan have been destroyed." 


"Indeed, even we have asked the Americans, on the off chance that you feel there is any spot you've called attention to and you have any data, we will promptly proceed to obliterate them," Nawaz told VOA.

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