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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PM's address at the Joint Session
of the Parliament of Afghanistan
May 13, 2011, Kabul, Afghanistan
I am overwhelmed by the honour given to me today to
address the joint session of the Parliament of Afghanistan.
I am conscious that this is a rare honour given to
a foreign leader. I am humbled by this gesture of love
and affection for India.
You, the Honourable Members of the Wolesi Jirga and
the Meshrano Jirga, represent the magnificent diversity,
hopes and aspirations of this great and ancient land.
I bring to you the greetings and good wishes of the
people of India.
Honourable Members,
Afghanistan is a country richly endowed in culture,
heritage, architecture and natural resources.
Afghanistan has been a centre of civilization. It has
given to the region and the world the richness of Dari
and Pashto literature, the Sufi traditions of the Chistis,
the legacy of the Buddha and Buddhist art in Bamiyan,
the Gandhara School of art and much more.
Afghanistan has been the junction between South and
Central Asia and a gateway to India.
Our ties of history and culture go back many millennia.
The founder of the Mughal Empire Emperor Babar lies
interred here in his favourite garden in Kabul.
In his brilliant reign of five years, Sher Shah Suri
built the Grand Trunk Road from Kabul to Delhi. This
facilitated the traditional exchange of religious ideas,
the carriage of goods, travellers, kings and commoners.
Kagazi badams and Kandahari anars are well known delicacies
in India.
Bacha Khan, who was known as the Frontier Gandhi because
of his friendship with Mahatma Gandhi, was laid to rest
in Jalalabad according to his wishes.
Our forefathers have bequeathed to us a rich heritage
of social, cultural and political ties. These civilisational
connections have tied together our traditions and faiths
and our terrain and temperament.
As leaders and representatives, we have the sacred
duty to strengthen and enrich these bonds forged by
our people over centuries.
I have come to Afghanistan to renew these ties of friendship,
solidarity and fraternity. This is the only agenda that
I have come with. This is the only agenda that the people
of India have in Afghanistan.
Honourable Members,
Afghanistan has undergone great trials and tribulations.
But we know that the Afghan people are proud, brave
and fiercely independent. We know that they are strong
and resilient in the face of adversity. These are qualities
widely admired in India.
In the ten years since it decided to turn its back
on the past and face the future, Afghanistan has made
significant progress in many areas. There are undoubtedly
many challenges ahead. The process of nation building
is long and full of hurdles. National reconstruction
needs sustained hard work and sacrifice and is a process
of learning.
Our two countries face similar development challenges.
India is ready to partner the Afghan people as they
rebuild their country in accordance with their own priorities
and national circumstances.
Many of Afghanistans priorities are also our
priorities. Many of your problems are also our problems.
We fully support the vision of a secure, prosperous
and democratic future for Afghanistan outlined in the
National Priority Programmes initiated by the government
of Afghanistan.
Our experience of policy implementation in India has
been that participative democracy is a vital agent of
social and economic empowerment at the grassroots. It
has brought in more transparent and accountable governance.
The Afghan parliament already has reservation for women.
We have found that similar reservation in local bodies
in India is creating a new dynamic of development with
a human face.
School enrolment in your country has increased from
1 million to 7 million since 2002 and enrolment of girls
has doubled over the past four years.
I know that it is your topmost priority to put every
child in school and keep him or her there. In India
the mid-day meal scheme has been very successful in
our schools. We have been supplying fortified biscuits
to Afghan school children for the last few years.
But what we teach our children is equally important.
In India we have recently overhauled the school curriculum.
What children learn in school should be related to their
lives outside it. They should imbibe a sense of nationhood
and values of tolerance and respect for others. They
should be taught about the importance of the environment.
Education should stimulate and open their minds to creative
thought and imagination. The hopes and dreams of our
nations rest on the little shoulders of our children.
So we need to teach them well.
I know that Afghanistan has made strides in providing
health care to its people over the past decade. We would
be happy to strengthen the Indira Gandhi Institute of
Child Health and the work of our medical missions in
different provinces.
Building infrastructure is another challenge. We have
tried to provide such assistance as we could to provide
electricity and roads in Afghanistan.
I am happy that the transmission line built from Pul-e-Khumri
is now bringing a steady supply of electricity to the
capital.
I am happy that the sacrifices made in building the
Zaranj - Delaram highway have not gone in vain. The
population of Zaranj has increased. Trade is thriving
and customs revenues have grown.
Honourable Members,
The people of India feel privileged to see their development
cooperation receive such a warm welcome in Afghanistan.
Nothing would give us greater satisfaction than to see
Indian resources being utilized for more roads, more
electricity, more schools, more hospitals or more community
projects - activities that directly benefit the common
Afghan people.
We will increase development outlays towards capacity
building and skill development. This will include more
scholarships for Afghan students for studying in India,
institution building efforts, social development and
higher investment in the health sector by way of a medical
package. We will provide buses for Kabul and other municipalities.
We propose to upgrade the agricultural department at
the Kabul University to an agricultural university,
donate tractors to farmers and give scholarships for
the study of agricultural sciences.
We will significantly enhance our commitment for the
Small Development Projects Scheme across provinces to
further facilitate development at the grassroots with
the involvement of local communities.
We will help in the preservation and revival of Afghanistans
archeological and cultural heritage and restoration
of the historic Stor Palace in Kabul.
The total outlay on these and other additional initiatives
that we will take in consultation with the government
of Afghanistan in the next few years will amount to
500 million US dollars. This will take our total commitment
of assistance to around 2 billion US dollars.
Honourable Members,
Our ambitions and aspirations for growth and prosperity
cannot be realized unless there is peace and tranquility
that will allow our people to live and work in honour
and dignity.
I pay tribute to all those innocent men, women and
children who have lost their lives in the search for
a better tomorrow. The people of India feel and share
the pain and suffering of their Afghan brothers and
sisters.
Terrorism and extremism are alien ideas to our people.
They bring only death and destruction in their wake.
They provide no answers to the problems of poverty,
illiteracy, hunger and disease. They have no place in
a civilized society. Eventually, our centuries old traditions
of peaceful co-existence, of living in peace and harmony
with each other and with nature will prevail over these
deviant ideologies. We cannot and must not allow the
flames of extremism and terrorism to be fanned once
again.
Afghanistan has embarked upon a process of national
reconciliation. We wish you well in this enterprise.
It is up to you, as the peoples representatives,
to make decisions about your countrys future without
outside interference or coercion. This is your sovereign
right. India will respect the choices you make and the
decisions you take.
Our only interest is to see a stable, peaceful and
independent Afghanistan living in peace with its neighbours.
We hope that Afghanistan will be able to build a framework
of regional cooperation that will help its nation building
efforts.
As Afghanistan moves towards assuming full responsibility
for its security, we stand ready to widen our cooperation
in this area.
Honourable Members,
The people of this region have lived together for centuries.
This is our region and we have to survive together and
flourish together.
While the international community can help, ultimately
it is the people of the region who must take charge
of their own future.
We have to learn to solve our problems ourselves. This
is the lesson of history.
Honourable Members,
Afghanistans entry into the South Asian Association
of Regional Cooperation was a historic step. We must
invest and work together for our common future. The
countries of South Asia have been most prosperous and
stable when they have been well connected to each other
and the world. Geography and history make it imperative
that we cooperate to realize our common destiny.
If we are to build a common regional identity, we need
to learn more about each other. I have often said that
we know more about the countries of the West than we
do about each other. That is why it is very important
to multiply our people to people contacts.
Honourable Members,
Yesterday, President Karzai and I have agreed on a
Declaration of Strategic Partnership.
We have agreed to reinvigorate our relationship in
all sectors on the basis of mutual respect and mutual
equality.
This will be a long term partnership. Its main pillars
will be greater political interaction, a comprehensive
economic partnership, a trade development strategy,
a social development strategy, an agricultural outreach
strategy, a cultural development strategy, and a civil
society strategy. A Partnership Council will be set
up under the two Foreign Ministers.
I would especially like to underline the decision to
enhance people to people exchanges, including between
intellectuals, youth, women and the media.
Parliamentary exchanges are extremely useful and helpful.
I would suggest for your consideration the formation
of an India-Afghanistan Parliamentary Friendship Forum.
We will revitalize links between our business and trading
communities so that Afghanistans economy can fully
benefit from Indias economic growth.
Honourable Members,
I am happy that the people of Afghanistan are emerging
from the ravages of war and rebuilding the country as
a peaceful home for the confluence of cultures, for
commerce and development and where the countries of
the region cooperate rather than compete with each other.
As an abiding friend, India will always stand by you
in this noble task. We have always stood by our Afghan
friends and I want to reaffirm that we will do so in
future as well.
I once again thank you for giving me this great honour
of sharing some of my thoughts with you.
I am deeply grateful to President Karzai for his personal
friendship, and thank the people and Government of Afghanistan
for the warm hospitality extended to me during my stay
in this beautiful country.
Long live India-Afghanistan friendship.
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