New Delhi (Sputnik): Pakistan will not take part in the Doha talks with the Taliban and the US on the Afghan peace process, its Foreign Ministry said during a weekly media briefing on Thursday.
The ministry, however, reiterated that Pakistan is committed to the Afghan peace process and emphasised the importance of an intra-Afghan dialogue to lead the way forward to achieve durable peace in the war-torn country. The seventh round of talks between the Taliban, US delegation, Afghan politicians, and the Afghan government is expected to be held in Qatar's capital Doha next week.
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"Pakistan will not take part in Doha peace talks. However, Pakistan is committed to bring peace in Afghanistan through an Intra-Afghan dialogue", Dr Mohammed Faisal, spokesperson for the Pakistani Foreign Ministry, said.
The US special envoy for peace in Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, has visited Kabul and Islamabad twice over the past week to muster support for the ensuing peace process. The Afghan government will be officially taking part in the peace dialogue and has reportedly constituted a 22-member negotiating team to talk with the Taliban.
Khalilzad also discussed with Pakistani heads about how peace in Afghanistan could benefit Pakistan and unlock opportunities for regional economic integration and development. "The United States looks to Pakistan to continue playing a positive role in supporting the peace process", he added.
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On Thursday, Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi received Ambassador of Afghanistan to Pakistan Shukrullah Atif Mashal in Islamabad and discussed the progress of the peace process. The two countries affirmed the full utilisation of the Afghanistan-Pakistan Action Plan for Peace and Solidarity (APAPPS) to improve the trust between the two neighbours.
On 6 April, the Afghan government summoned a Pakistani diplomat to protest against Prime Minister Imran Khan's remarks on the ongoing Afghan peace talks, saying that Kabul considered these to be "explicit interference" in Afghan affairs.
"Afghanistan considers recent statements of Imran Khan explicit interference in internal affairs of Afghanistan and deems PM's remarks a return to his previous stance", Sibghatullah Ahmadi, spokesperson of the Afghan Foreign Ministry, tweeted.
In March, Afghanistan recalled its ambassador from Islamabad in response to Khan's suggestion that forming an interim Afghan government might smooth out peace talks between US and Taliban officials. However, the diplomat returned after Pakistan's Foreign Ministry stated that the remark had been reported out of context.