India's meeting with Central Asian countries in Delhi on Afghanistan, is this a response to the OIC meeting?

 India's meeting with Central Asian countries in Delhi on Afghanistan, is this a response to the OIC meeting?

India_Central Asian Dialogue

The 17th Extraordinary Meeting of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) member countries, hosted by Pakistan and hosted by Saudi Arabia on the situation in Afghanistan, is taking place in Islamabad on Sunday. Khan Mottaki and OIC Secretary General are attending.

Out of the total 57 OIC member states, 20 Foreign Ministers are attending the meeting in Islamabad while 10 Deputy Ministers or Ministers of State are representing their respective countries.

Representatives of the United Nations, the European Union, international financial institutions, regional and international organizations, Japan, Germany and other non-OIC countries have also been invited to the meeting.

But in India, meanwhile, a dialogue on the crisis in Afghanistan and regional ties is taking place on Sunday, with the foreign ministers of the Central Asian states of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan taking part. However, the delegations of these countries are definitely representing their respective countries in the meeting to be held in Pakistan.

The one-day India-Central Asia Dialogue is being chaired by Indian Foreign Minister SJ Shankar and includes the Foreign Ministers of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

This is the third conference of its kind to discuss regional ties and trade, in addition to Afghanistan.

According to the Press Trust of India, Tajik Foreign Minister Sarojuddin Mehruddin is visiting India in connection with the aforementioned dialogue as well as a bilateral visit.

On November 10 last month, the national security advisers of all these Central Asian countries participated in another such dialogue in India, the subject of which was Afghanistan.

Russia and Iran's national security advisers were also present at the dialogue.

The countries participating in Sunday's meeting in Delhi are members of the OIC, and three of them (Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan) share a border with Afghanistan.

But his foreign ministers decided to go to India instead of attending the OIC meeting in Islamabad, which suggests that they also want to maintain cooperation with India on the issue of Afghanistan.

OIC Summit in Pakistan, Dialogue in India

In his inaugural address at the OIC Summit, the Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan said that hosting the 17th Extraordinary Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the OIC was a great pleasure for Pakistan.

He said,''This extraordinary meeting will examine the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan, especially the challenges facing humanity, and will propose concrete steps to help the Afghan people who desperately need the support and cooperation of the international community''.

Pakistan has in the past hosted OIC meetings on the situation in Afghanistan. But Mahmoud Saiqal, a former deputy foreign minister of Afghanistan, said on Twitter that Pakistan had hosted a meeting of OIC foreign ministers on the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in 1980, but this time with a neutral OIC member. Should have hosted

Is the meeting in New Delhi in response to Pakistan?

Meanwhile, with the participation of the foreign ministers of five Muslim-majority Central Asian countries in the Indian capital, New Delhi, some quarters are getting the impression that the dialogue is being held in a way in response to the OIC summit in Pakistan. Is.

According to local Indian media, the five foreign ministers will also jointly liaise with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Addressing the participants on the occasion, Foreign Minister SJ Shankar said, “We all have deep historical and cultural ties with Afghanistan. Our concerns and goals in this country are the same: a comprehensive and representative government, the fight against terrorism and drug trafficking, ensuring uninterrupted humanitarian assistance and the protection of the rights of children, minorities and women''.

He told visiting ministers,''We must find ways to help the people of Afghanistan''.

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