Pakistan must keep its promise to crackdown on insurgents operating out of terror sanctuaries in the country, Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah has demanded, hours after Taliban overran the strategic city of Kunduz.
"The presence of terrorist sanctuaries and support networks in Pakistan continue to cause trouble inside Afghanistan," Abdullah said during his address to the United Nations General Assembly yesterday on the opening day of its 70th annual General Debate.
"The Haqqani network has been identified as a main culprit and needs to be dismantled as has been our demand in the past," he said.
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Last month, Afghanistan had blamed Pakistan for not doing enough to counter militants who carried out a series of deadly attacks in the Afghan capital, Kabul.
"We also call on regional stakeholders and our international partners to realise the gravity of the situation, and use their good offices or any effective means to support our aspirations for a genuine and durable confidence-building process leading to talks with willing Taliban and other armed opposition groups," he said.
He also noted that the world faces a host of mainly human-made threats and called for United Nations reforms to deal speedily and effectively with the challenges ahead.
"Never has the world and the UN faced such fast-paced change - both constructive and harmful - such abrupt fluctuations, heightened expectations and immediate demands for solutions and answers," he told the General Assembly.
Kunduz is the first provincial capital seized by the Taliban since they lost power in the US-led invasion in 2001.
The attack on the northern city came as President Ashraf Ghani completed a year in office.
The attack on Kunduz began at dawn yesterday as fighters fell upon the city from different directions. They captured key buildings and freed about 500 prisoners, including members of the Taliban, from the jail.