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July, 2012
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Imran Khan for negotiated settlement of Afghanistan conflict |
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LONDON, July 13 (APP)- Ruling
out a military solution to the conflict in Afghanistan, Chairman, Pakistan
Tehreek-e-Insaf, Imran Khan has called for negotiated settlement through the
formation of a consensus government in the land-locked south west Asian country.
Speaking at the Foreign Press
Association on Monday, the cricketer-turned-politician said the situation was
heavily impacting Pakistan which is paying a huge price in terms of human losses
and material damage as a ‘blow back’ to the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan and
the fighting in the tribal region, Swat and Malakand division.
He narrated the history of the
tribal region and said there was a need to differentiate between the situation
in Swat and FATA. Swat,he said was a settled area where the people demanded a
Justice system which prevailed in the former princely State before it became a
part of Pakistan in 1969 as the present legal system has failed to deliver
justice to the people.
The PTI Chief said the fighting
in FATA has spilled over from Afghanistan where USA and NATO forces are engaged
with Taliban and elements of Al-Qaeda.
Khan said no Taliban existed in
Pakistan prior to 9/11 and it only when US decided to first bomb Afghanistan
and later went into that country that the resistance began.
He said history has shown that
Pashtuns living across the Durand Line have taken up arms against the invading
forces and they see the current NATO and ISAF forces as invaders.
The PTI Chairman argued in
favour of peace and said unless situation returns to normalcy no development
could take place either in Afghanistan or in the tribal regions of Pakistan.
He urged Pakistan Government to
formulate a policy to end the crisis in the tribal areas, saying that situation
in the FATA was impeding progress and development.
Khan said people have supported
military action in Swat because the extremists and religious militants attempted
to introduce a repressive brand of Islam.
Responding to a question , he
said the West face danger from Al-Qaeda but not from Taliban whom he described
as religious fundamentalists whose knowledge does not go beyond their respective
areas.
Imran also spoke about his
visit to US and discussion held with the members of the US think tank and
Senator John Kerry and he was of the view that American leaders are not entirely
in complete picture about the ground realities in Afghanistan. He said the
Americans he met held the same view of a negotiated settlement of the Afghan
conflict and more troops surge will lead to greater casualities and collateral
damage.
He called for an exit strategy
from Afghanistan and said both the UK and the US need to learn lessons from the
history and of Pushtoon resistance to the foreign occupiers. Khan said even the
UK special envoy on Pakistan and Afghanistan Sir Sherard Cowper-Cooper has
spoken of settling the issue through dialogues instead of guns and bullets.
The PTI Chairman also claimed
that three previous peace accords in FATA were scuttled under pressure from the
US Government whose drone attacks in tribal areas has turned the public opinion
in Pakistan against America.
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Chinese Premier Visit to Pakistan |
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Presidential address to the joint sitting of parliament |
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