KABUL: Afghan President Ashraf Ghani will make his first state visit
to neighbouring Pakistan Friday, seeking to improve ties that are
crucial to his hopes of reviving Taliban peace talks as US troops end
their 13-year war.
Ghani and Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
are expected to attend a cricket match between the two countries in
Islamabad on Saturday, officials said, in a public demonstration of
better relations despite fraught cross-border tensions.
Both nations accuse each other of allowing militants to shelter in
the border regions and launch bloody attacks that threaten regional
stability.
But diplomats say that Ghani's presidency, which
started in September, presents a major opportunity at a time when US-led
Nato troops are withdrawing from the fight against the Taliban.
“Both
sides are very interested in seizing the opportunity presented by the
political transition,” US ambassador in Islamabad Richard Olson said
this week.
“There is quite genuinely a basis for a new
relationship between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Both sides are aware of
this historical moment and making efforts to seize it.”
Pakistan
was one of only three countries to recognise the hardline Taliban regime
that ruled Kabul from 1996 until 2001 when it was deposed by a US-led
international military coalition.
Former Afghan president Hamid
Karzai routinely accused Pakistan of continuing to fuel the Taliban
insurgency to destabilise his country, a charge Islamabad denies.
The
long-standing tensions between the two countries were highlighted last
week when a US Pentagon report said Pakistan continues to use “proxy
forces” to destabilise Afghanistan.
A foreign office spokeswoman in Islamabad said Ghani's two-day visit would start on Friday.
Afghan
cricket board spokesman Mohammad Aziz Gharwal said the two leaders plan
to attend a match between Pakistan ‘A’ and Afghanistan ‘A’ on Saturday.
Ghani,
who emerged as president after a long dispute over fraud-mired
elections, has said that seeking peace is his first priority after
decades of conflict in Afghanistan.
The Taliban, which dismissed
the Afghan election as a US plot, has often said they will fight on
until all foreign troops have left Afghanistan.
About 12,500 US-led troops will stay on into next year on a Nato training and support mission.
Karzai also pursued peace talks with the insurgents, but preliminary efforts collapsed last year.
Pakistan
has been battling militant groups in its semi-autonomous tribal belt
since 2004, and the army launched a major offensive in the north-west
border area in June.
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