Pakistan has taken a good step and reopened its border with landlocked Afghanistan for travellers and trade convoys, a month after closing them on grounds terrorists were using Afghan soil for plotting deadly attacks against the country.Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif took the decision ‘as a goodwill gesture’ and hoped the Afghan government would take steps required to address ‘the reasons’ that triggered the border closure.The border crossings between the two hyphenated neighbours were closed on February 16 following a string of deadly bombings killed and maimed dozens of people across the country. The border closure left hundreds of thousands of people and container trucks loaded with trade goods to Afghanistan stranded at the two major crossings of Torkham and Chaman. Interestingly, PM Nawaz minced no words in stating that the recent terrorist attacks in Pakistan were being traced back to the sanctuaries of militants in Afghanistan. Notwithstanding he ordered reopening of the border citing ‘centuries-old’ religious, cultural and historic links.The development came after representatives of the two countries held the highest-level face-to-face discussion on cross-border terrorism in London last week.Prime Minister’s Adviser on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz had met Afghanistan’s National Security Adviser Hanif Atmar and lodged complaints that Afghan-based militants had been mounting attacks on the Pakistani soil.It seems the interaction eventually bore fruit and the two neighbours decided to move forward. As a first step in this direction, the government decided to facilitate people-to-people contacts by reopening the border crossings.This was also corroborated by Afghan Ambassador Omar Zakhilwal’s comments who said Pakistan has ‘unconditionally’ opened the border in accordance with the steps agreed upon during last week’s high-level talks in London.Tensions along the frontier have been simmering for months, after hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees in Pakistan had been repatriated last year.The government attempts to control the previously open border and implement customs duties have also sparked complaints from traders used to crossing with impunity.Torkham and Chaman were briefly opened on March 7-8 by Pakistan to allow Pakistani and Afghan citizens who had valid travel documents to return home. About 50,000 Afghans took advantage of the move and crossed back into their country. About 6,000 or 7,000 Pakistanis travelled the other way.Pakistan and Afghanistan share a 2,600-kilometer largely porous border, with five dedicated crossings for legal movements, including bilateral and transit trade convoys, transporting imported goods to the landlocked country from Karachi port on the Arabian Sea.The protracted border closure has cost businesses on both sides tens of millions of dollars and fueled bilateral tensions. The abrupt move stranded thousands of trucks loaded with fresh fruits, vegetables, poultry and other food items, sharply increasing prices of imported goods in Afghanistan. It is widely understood that the administration in Kabul lacks the capacity to eradicate on its own the several terrorist networks which have gathered in Afghanistan. Instead of harming the terrorists, border closures in fact help them by causing estrangement between governments and the people of the two countries. The two countries would meet next month in Moscow, where a twelve nation moot would take up the issue of bringing peace to Afghanistan. Afghanistan needs to remove Pakistan’s concerns regarding the use of Afghan territory by India against Pakistan and should cooperate with Pakistan in border management initiatives.
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