Business Standard

Australia welcomes unity government deal in Afghanistan

Image

IANS Sydney

Australia Tuesday welcomed the Afghanistan unity government agreement between Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai and Abdullah Abdullah.

The two candidates in Afghanistan's presidential election have finalised a power-sharing deal to form a government of national unity, Xinhua reported.

Under the deal, Abdullah Abdullah agreed that Ashraf Ghani should be the president. In return, Abdullah will nominate a chief executive, with powers similar to that of a prime minister.

Australian foreign minister Julie Bishop said a new president will mark the first democratic transfer of power in Afghanistan.

"The new government will face challenges, but strong leadership from both candidates will provide a foundation for Afghanistan to progress its long-standing governance and economic reform agenda," Bishop said in a statement.

 

The Australian government has committed A$300 million ($266 million) towards the sustainment of Afghanistan's security forces.

"Australia also maintains significant levels of development assistance to Afghanistan with a focus on economic growth, governance, the rights of women and girls, and humanitarian relief," Bishop said.

"Australia remains committed to supporting a more peaceful and prosperous Afghanistan, and we stand ready to work with the new government to this end," he added.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Sep 23 2014 | 10:52 AM IST

Explore News