Ghani warns against Afghan \\\'proxy war\\\' at South Asia summit
Thursday, 27 November 2014
KATHMANDU, Nov 26 (AFP): Afghanistan's new president told the leaders of India and Pakistan he would not let his country become the battleground of a proxy war Wednesday as the enmity between South Asia's arch rivals cast a shadow over a regional summit.
Nuclear-armed neighbours India and Pakistan-bitter and sometimes bloody rivals since gaining independence from Britain in 1947 -- have long accused each other of using proxy forces to try to gain influence in Afghanistan.
But the imminent departure of NATO combat forces from Afghanistan has raised fears that rivalry could escalate, further destabilising the two countries' troubled neighbour as it seeks to rebuild after decades of war.
President Ashraf Ghani issued his warning to South Asian leaders meeting in the Nepalese capital Kathmandu to try to reinvigorate regional cooperation held back by decades of rivalry between India and Pakistan.
"We will not allow our territory to be used against any of our neighbours. But we will not permit anybody to conduct proxy wars on our soil either," he told the gathered leaders including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Pakistan's Nawaz Sharif.
Ghani's predecessor Hamid Karzai frequently accused Islamabad of trying to destabilise the Kabul government by giving sanctuary to Taliban fighters.
Only last week, former Pakistan president Pervez Musharraf warned that the departure of NATO troops at the end of the year could provoke a proxy Indo-Pakistan war involving members of Afghanistan's rival ethnic groups.
Without mentioning Pakistan by name, Ghani said that state sponsorship of non-state actors could have damaging effects.
The leaders of the eight South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) countries are meeting for the first time since the election of a new Indian government eager to improve ties in the face of growing Chinese influence in its backyard.
Regional leaders at the meeting stressed the need for greater cooperation to combat poverty in South Asia, where cross-border trade remains minimal, held back by mistrust and weak infrastructure.
"My vision for our region is a dispute free South Asia where instead of fighting each other we jointly fight poverty, illiteracy, disease, malnourishment and unemployment," said Pakistan's Sharif.