A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, December 4, 2016
India, Afghanistan plan air cargo link over Pakistan
Afghan
President Ashraf Ghani (L) and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi
pose for the media outside Hyderabad House in Delhi, India September 14,
2016. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton/Files
By Sanjeev Miglani | AMRITSAR, INDIA- Sat Dec 3, 2016
India and Afghanistan are planning to set up an air cargo service to
help increase trade that both say is stymied because of their tense
political relations with Pakistan that lies between them, Indian and
Afghan officials said on Saturday.
The cargo service will aim 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, Indian officials said.
An announcement on the service is expected after a meeting between
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on
Sunday in the northern Indian city of Amritsar, a short distance from
the Pakistan border. The two leaders are attending the Heart of Asia
conference aimed at stabilising Afghanistan.
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.
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.
Pakistan's top foreign policy official Sartaj Aziz, who was due to
attend the conference on Sunday, arrived a day earlier opening the
possibility of a meeting with his Indian hosts to try and break a chill
in ties.
Indian officials have been steadfast that there cannot be any dialogue
with Pakistan until it acts against militant groups operating from its
soil. Islamabad denies the allegation and says New Delhi must hold talks
on the future of Kashmir, the dispute at the centre of nearly 70 years
of hostility.
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.
"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 in Kabul ahead of
the conference.
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 build
the 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.
Afghan ambassador to India Shaida M. Abdali said measures to fight
terrorism was key. Afghanistan says Pakistan has 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," he said in Amritsar.
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.
(Additional reporting by James Mackenzie in Kabul; Editing by Nick Macfie and Clelia Oziel)

