ISLAMABAD, Dec 3: Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri will visit Kabul from December 7 to 9 to give final shape to the proposed peace jirga of tribal elders on both sides of the Durand Line.

“On top of the agenda will be an attempt to firm up the constitution of the grand jirgas and a schedule for convening them,” a senior Foreign Ministry official told Dawn, adding that the two sides have been in touch over the modalities for such a jirga.

Joint jirga of Pakistani and Afghan tribal elders is to be held under a plan agreed by President Gen Pervez Musharraf and Afghan President Hamid Karzai at a White House tripartite summit meeting hosted by US President George W. Bush on September 27.The underlying objective of convening the grand jirga is to find a viable solution to militancy in the region.

The proposal was mooted by the Afghan president who believes it will help stem resurgence of Taliban and to establish peace.

According to the proposed plan, Pakistani tribal elders would be invited to Kabul and Afghan leaders would come to Pakistan to convene jirgas which would be addressed by both President Musharraf and President Karzai.

The Afghan government is keen that international observers also be present at the jirgas.

Agenda of Mr Kasuri’s formal talks with his Afghan counterpart Dr Rangin Dadfar Spanta this week will also cover bolstering border security and bilateral cooperation in all areas including war against terrorism.

In this context, Mr Kasuri is likely to reiterate a number of measures that the government has made to ensure that Pakistani territory is not used for violence in Afghanistan.

These include fencing of the international borders between the two countries; selectively mining and fencing the borders; introducing restrictions and checks on movement such as requirement of documentation on the points where the movement is allowed and real-time intelligence-sharing for which mechanisms like the tripartite commission are in place.

Opinion

One year on

One year on

Governance by the ruling coalition has been underwhelming and marked by growing authoritarianism.

Editorial

Climate funding gap
Updated 17 Feb, 2025

Climate funding gap

Pakistan must boost its institutional capacity to develop bankable climate projects.
UN monitoring report
Updated 17 Feb, 2025

UN monitoring report

Pakistan must press Kabul diplomatically over its tolerance of TTP terrorism.
Tax policy reform
17 Feb, 2025

Tax policy reform

THE cabinet’s decision to create a Tax Policy Office at the finance ministry has raised hopes that tax policy is...
Maintaining balance
Updated 16 Feb, 2025

Maintaining balance

It must take a more proactive approach to establishing Pakistan’s bona fides.
Welcome return
16 Feb, 2025

Welcome return

IT is almost here; the moment Pakistan has long been waiting for — the first International Cricket Council...
Childhood trauma
16 Feb, 2025

Childhood trauma

BEING a child in this society should not be so hard. But recurrent reports of child abuse — from burying girl...