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India reiterates commitment to help in rebuilding stable Afghanistan

IANS  |  New Delhi 

on Tuesday reiterated its commitment to help rebuild a "stable, inclusive and economically vibrant" and boost connectivity initiatives with the war-ravaged nation.

"stands committed to any process which can help emerge as a united, peaceful, secure, stable, inclusive and economically vibrant nation, with guaranteed gender and human rights," of State for External Affairs M.J. Akbar said while addressing the "Conference on Afghanistan: Peace Process, Security Cooperation and Regional Connectivity" in the capital.

"We must all conform to internationally recognised red-lines," Akbar said in the speech, a copy of which was released by the here.

"I also wish to reiterate India's willingness and keenness to engage bilaterally and multilaterally, in cooperation with likeminded countries and international organisations."

Referring to India's role as a leading development aid partner of Afghanistan, Akbar said that "has worked with principle and commitment to serve the Afghan people through capacity building, gender emancipation, human resource development, infrastructure development, connectivity, trade and investment" and its commitment for developmental assistance stands at $3 billion.

"Last year we embarked upon the New Development Partnership, which will support 116 'High Impact Community Development Projects' in according to the priorities of the They include large scale projects such as drinking water for city and low-cost housing for returning Afghan refugees."

Akbar said that India's other key priority is helping in building "robust, reliable and year-round connectivity, improving trade and investment relations of with prominent markets in the region and beyond".

"We strongly believe that lack of connectivity directly impacts the economic, security and political situation in

"A well-connected can hope to become economically vibrant, prosperous and politically stable. It will be able to engage the energies of its youth, and attract back lost talent from an Afghan diaspora."

In this connection, he referred to the in that was inaugurated in December last year.

India, and signed a trilateral agreement in 2016 to jointly develop the Chabahar port, opening a new strategic transit route between the three nations and other Central Asian nations, bypassing

"The Indian grant aid of 170,000 tonnes wheat supplies to is currently transiting through Chabahar," Akbar said.

"The India-air freight corridor, established in June 2017, is another important achievement," he said, adding that there are now cargo flights between Kabul, Kandahar, and

"Thus far, over 110 flights have carried over 2,000 tonnes of exports from to worth over tens of millions of dollars."

At the same time, Akbar said that "terrorism and connectivity do not go together" in an obvious reference to Pakistan's support to terrorism.

"born of extreme radicalism can be contagious, it is in our combined interest to eliminate it, so that and its neighbours can pursue the objectives of peace and prosperity for their people," he said.

"Prosperity is impossible without peace and the greatest contemporary threat to peace is terrorism."

Stressing "peace and reconciliation are difficult objectives in an atmosphere of terror and violence", Akbar said: "We support strong action to pursue those who still choose the path of terrorism, aided by those who manipulate funds from an illicit narcotics trade to finance terror against innocent people."

Uzbek organised the two-day Conference on that started on Monday.

Iran, and the US were among the countries that participated in the conference.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, March 27 2018. 21:06 IST
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