PESHAWAR: A prominent Pakistani religious politician will visit Kabul ahead of the next general elections in February, his party confirmed on Saturday, after receiving a formal invitation from the Afghan envoy amid strained bilateral relations between the two neighboring countries.
Faced with a sharp spike in militant violence and suicide bombings, Pakistan has blamed Afghanistan for not doing enough to prevent cross-border attacks by armed factions like the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) whose leadership is said to be based in the neighboring state.
The situation reached the boiling point in October when the administration in Islamabad announced a deportation drive to send all “illegal migrants,” mostly Afghans, back to their countries while citing security reasons.
Maulana Fazlur Rehman, leader of the Jamiat-e-Ulama-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) party, who has been invited by the Afghan administration, was also attacked by militants when his public rally was targeted by a suicide bomber in the Bajaur tribal district on July 30 in which 63 people were killed.
Rehman, who wants to win maximum seats from the northwestern trial belt and the rest of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, has raised security concerns in the area where JUI-F has been finding it increasingly difficult to run its election campaign.
“The trip [of Maulana Fazlur Rehman] is not taking place under any specific agenda but he has been officially invited to visit Kabul,” his party spokesman, Aslam Ghauri, told Arab News. “There is no date fixed but his trip will take place after the filing of the nomination papers for the upcoming elections.”
Pakistan’s national polls are scheduled to be held on Feb. 8, 2024.
Earlier in the day, a statement released by the JUI-F said Afghanistan’s interim envoy, Sardar Ahmad Shakib, had met its leader in Islamabad on behalf of the Taliban administration.
Last month, Rehman had expressed his reservations over the deportation of Afghan refugees from Pakistan.
Speaking to Arab News, Shamim Shahid, a Peshawar-based analyst, said a number of matters were likely to come under discussion during the JUI-F chief’s Kabul visit.
“A range of issues such as the TTP, an uptick in violence in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces, girls’ education in Afghanistan and the expulsions of Afghan refugees from Pakistan are most likely to come under discussion during the visit,” he said. “But I don’t think this trip will yield any tangible results because most of these problems are complex in nature.”
He said it was significant that Rehman’s visit to Afghanistan comes at a time when he has complained about not getting a “level playing field” in different parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan due to security reasons.
Senior Pakistani officials, including Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, have accused the Afghan Taliban of facilitating some of the attacks inside the country.
A defense analyst, Brig. (r) Syed Nazir, said Pakistan had already summoned the Afghan ambassador to lodge protest after 23 soldiers were killed in a militant attack on their post in Dera Ismail Khan this month.
“As a seasoned politician, Maulana Fazlur Rehman understands his country’s position on security and political issues,” he told Arab News. “In the current scenario, his visit can acquire paramount importance to mend tense ties between Kabul and Islamabad.”
Leading Pakistani cleric prepares for pre-election Kabul visit amid strained bilateral ties
https://arab.news/6ezfn
Leading Pakistani cleric prepares for pre-election Kabul visit amid strained bilateral ties
- Maulana Fazlur Rehman has been invited to visit Afghanistan by the interim Taliban government in Kabul
- The visit comes at a time when JUI-F has said security issues are making it hard to run election campaign
Nine Afghan citizens killed, 10 injured in accident in southwestern Pakistan— police
- Pickup truck carrying Afghan nationals collided with oil tanker in Nokundi town, says police official
- Says Afghan nationals were attempting to enter Europe illegally via Iran as per preliminary probe
QUETTA: At least nine Afghan nationals were killed and 10 others injured in southwestern Pakistan on Sunday when the pickup truck they were traveling in collided with an oil tanker, a police official said.
The collision occurred in Nokundi, a town located on Pakistan’s border with Iran in the southwestern Balochistan province. District Police Officer Muhammad Shareef Kalhoro told Arab News that the Zamyad vehicle (a pickup truck made by Iranian automobile manufacturer Zamyad Co.) was transporting Afghan nationals illegally when the accident took place.
“Twenty-one illegal Afghan migrants were onboard the Zamyad vehicle when it was hit by an oil tanker in the kacha [remote] area of Nokundi,” Kalhoro said.
“Nine Afghans were killed on the spot and 10 were injured in the serious accident,” he added.
The police official said the bodies and injured persons were sent back to Afghanistan through cross-border coordination and in accordance with legal protocol.
Kalhoro said preliminary investigations indicate the Afghan nationals were attempting to enter Europe illegally from Afghanistan via Iran, facilitated by an organized human smuggling network.
“All legal proceedings have been initiated, and the human smuggling network is being traced for further action,” he said.
Pakistan launched a nationwide crackdown against people living in the country illegally in 2023, with Afghan refugees bearing the brunt of the deportation drive. Pakistan says it has deported over 1.5 million Afghans since then. The crackdown was launched after a spate of suicide attacks in the country that Islamabad blamed on Afghan nationals without providing proof.
Thousands of migrants travel illegally through the desolate areas of Chaghi district in Balochistan every year in an attempt to reach Europe via Iran.
Balochistan, home to the multi-billion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor project, is considered by experts to be Pakistan’s most underdeveloped province across almost all social and economic indicators.
The province is also home to multi-billion-dollar mineral projects such as Saindak and Reko Diq. However, most districts in Balochistan have dilapidated roads, which often lead to fatal accidents.










