London [UK]:Amjad Ayub Mirza, an exiled activist from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir raised doubts over the ongoing peace negotiations held in Doha between the Afghan government and Taliban.
Taliban-Afghan peace talks that resumed on January 5, 2021, in the capital of Qatar, Doha have been marked with distrust. In December, the head of Taliban political wing in Doha, Mullah Baradar was officially visiting Pakistan as head of a three-member delegation. He held meetings with Prime Minister Imran Khan and Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi in which a strategy was designed to steer the talks in favour of the Taliban and eventually Pakistan, said Mirza.
As per him, both the Taliban delegation and Pakistan allegedly agreed to drag the negotiations till May 2021, the month when American troops would finally leave Afghanistan.
"The Taliban have no desire for peace. They are applying tactics that are aimed at prolonging the peace negotiations until the US troops leave the country," said Afghan chief of intelligence Ahmed Zia Saraj while briefing the Afghan Parliament on January 6.
Moreover, Afghan First Vice President Amrullah Saleh informed a public meeting that the Taliban could not give legitimacy to their violence from a religious perspective. "Well, this sums up the gist of the form of the Doha peace talks. While the Taliban insist on Shariah Law to be enforced in Afghanistan, the democratically elected government of Ashraf Ghani is adamant that only through democratically held elections will the future of Afghanistan be decided. Hence, I foresee a stalemate," he added.
Mirza charged Pakistan of meddling with the internal affairs of Afghanistan for the past six decades. Pakistani establishment holds a grudge against Afghanistan that goes way back to 1949 when it opposed Pakistan's membership to the UN. This grudge was remembered by the former President of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf in a televised interview which still wanders over several social media platforms, said the activist.
Moreover, Pakistan has always envied Indo-Afghan relations and has been treating Afghanistan as a necessary neighbour for its strategic depth against India. Hence, the desire to be able to control the seat of power in Kabul has always been the pivot of South Asian foreign policy of the rogue Islamic jihadist state of Pakistan, added Mirza.
Instead, India has been helping Afghanistan in its reconstruction, despite the fact that Afghanistan is predominantly a Muslim country, said the activist.
Pakistan has been hindering any development project that is initiated by India. For instance, in August 2019 Pakistan refused to grant Afghanistan permission for the transportation of Indian goods through Wagah border. It was the year when Indian exports to war-stricken Afghanistan had almost touched USD one billion. India's exports grew over 89 per cent between 2015-16 and 2019-20. Today Indian export volume is close to USD two billion, he added.