Short of naming Pakistan, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his inaugural address at the Heart of Asia meet said, "The growing arc of terrorist violence endangers our entire region. As such, support for voices of peace in Afghanistan alone is not enough."
"It must be backed by resolute action. Not just against forces of terrorism, but also against those who support, shelter, train and finance them," he said asserting that terrorism and externally induced instability pose the gravest threat to Afghanistan's peace, stability and prosperity.
Time has come for concrete action against terror infrastructure and those support it, Ghani asserted and quoted a top Taliban commander saying unless terror sanctuaries were allowed in Pakistan, the outfit will not last even a month.
He said despite Afghanistan's bilateral and multilateral ties with Pakistan, the "undeclared war" that started in winter of 2014, has intensified after the recent Brussels conference on Afghanistan's transition.
Asking the international community to "demonstrate strong collective will to defeat terror networks that cause bloodshed and spread fear", Modi said silence and inaction against terrorism in Afghanistan and in the region will "only embolden terrorists and their masters".
"Let us re-dedicate ourselves to making Afghanistan a geography of peace. A place where reason and peace succeeds; progress and prosperity prevails and democracy and plurality wins," Modi added.
to bring "durable peace and lasting political stability" to Afghanistan. He said securing its territory and citizens from external threats must be a focus area for the "critical unfinished mission of our time".
"We have no doubt about the scale of the challenge. But, we are equally determined to succeed," he said, adding the results of collective efforts thus far have been hard-won, but mixed.
The Prime Minister said there was a need to reflect with urgency on what more must be done and what must be avoided in Afghanistan so that its citizens can self-sustain peace and economic growth.
In his hard-hitting speech, Ghani said,"There should be an Asian or international regime, whatever is acceptable to Pakistan, should be put in place to verify frontier activities and terrorist operations."
"We do not want blame game, we want verification," Ghani said, without mincing words.
