Qatar, Turkey to work together on stabilising Afghanistan
Qatar’s foreign minister has reiterated his country’s position on addressing the situation in Afghanistan, saying Doha will continue to work towards enhancing philanthropic and profitable sweats in the war- torn country.
In a common press conference with his Turkish counterpart in Qatar’s capital Doha on Monday, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said Qatar will work with supporter Turkey and Taliban officers to insure that Kabul’s transnational field, the point of chaotic scenes after the Taliban preemption, continues to serve.
Sheikh Mohammed was speaking to journalists alongside Turkey’s FM Mevlut Cavusoglu after the brace met as part of the seventh periodic Qatar-Turkey Strategic Dialogue.
The two- day meeting,co-chaired by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, is anticipated to end with the signing of at least 12 MoUs on Tuesday across colorful fields including the service, health, tourism, and education sectors, among others.
Cavusoglu said Turkey was seeking to work for “ peace and stability” in Afghanistan as he prompted the transnational community to engage in dialogue with the Taliban and called on them to “ separate” between the political and philanthropic side of effects.
“ This is what we’ve done as Afghans are in critical need of philanthropic backing,” he said, adding that Turkey is cooperating with Qatar on offering philanthropic backing and on icing Kabul’s field remains open.
Qatar and Turkey have a strong and strategic relationship at political, profitable and military situations.
The Supreme Strategic Committee was established in 2014 to enhance relations between the two countries.
On Monday, the two ministers reaffirmed their strong ties, telling journalists that they had reviewed colorful indigenous and transnational issues and bandied way that would further cement relations.
Among the indigenous issues bandied was the ongoing conflict in Libya where Qatar and Turkey backed theUN-recognised government in the west of the country.
The two officers also bandied the war in Syria, saying a “ political result” is urgently demanded before Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government can be invited to return the Arab League.
There’s “ no sense” in normalising ties with Syria without it first taking serious way towards a “ political result”, Sheikh Mohammed said.
“ I do n’t suppose we’re in a position to offer him (Assad) a free pass to come to the Arab League,” he said, a statement that Cavusoglu agreed with.
The absence of a political result will “ buoy this governance to continue its aggression on Idlib”, he said, pertaining to the last revolutionary- held enclave in northwestern Syria on the border with Turkey – which backs several opposition groups.