What's new

Afghanistan Signs Agreement to Send Students to Pakistan

ArsalanKhan21

SENIOR MEMBER
Jan 4, 2015
4,006
-2
5,132
Country
Pakistan
Location
Canada
This is a good step of creating goodwell between the countries in the future.

Afghanistan Signs Agreement to Send Students to Pakistan

Afghanistan Signs Agreement to Send Students to Pakistan

Ayesha Tanzeem
February 21, 2015 3:30 PM

LAHORE, PAKISTAN—
In a small ceremony that belied the significance of the event, Afghanistan’s ambassador to Pakistan on Saturday signed a memorandum of understanding with an elite Pakistani university to send Afghan students to study on its campus in Lahore.

This means that for the first time, Afghanistan will be using public funds to support its students' higher education abroad, and the choice of the host country, Pakistan, reflects the shift in Kabul's often-fraught relations with its eastern neighbor.

The administration of former Afghan President Hamid Karzai frequently accused Pakistan of providing Afghan Taliban with safe havens on its soil and even facilitating cross-border attacks. The accusations were often reiterated by American officials.

The inauguration of Ashraf Ghani as president in Afghanistan and General Raheel Sharif as the new army chief in Pakistan has seen a sea change in attitudes and increased security cooperation. Ghani, said Afghanistan's ambassador to Pakistan, Janan Mosazai, is eager to broaden the new relationship to other areas.

“We want to use the scholarship program as another bridge between Afghanistan and Pakistan,” said the Afghan envoy. The hope is that it will lead to “closer, meaningful, deeper people-to-people relations” between the two countries.

The $1 million pledged by the Afghan government to send students to the Lahore University of Management Sciences, or LUMS, will be added to $2 million contributed by the Pakistani government. A focus of the student program, along with building contacts between people, is to facilitate business development in Afghanistan. LUMS is considered one of the premier business management training institutes in the region.

The first group of five to 10 Afghan students is expected to arrive in Lahore as early as this summer. They will get acclimated to their new surroundings and the weather, Lahore being much hotter than Afghanistan in general, before starting their first semester in fall.

Mosazai expects as many women as men to be part of the group.

Yet, the warming of relations between the two countries is new, and still untested.

Afghanistan expects Pakistan to deliver on its promise of bringing Afghan Taliban to the negotiating table. If that does not happen, Ghani may run out of political capital to be friendly to Pakistan.

Sohail Naqvi, vice chancellor of LUMS, did not expect such an eventuality to have a negative impact on the education program.

Both sides said they hoped for increased funding in the future to include more students and eventually maybe even midcareer professionals, with the Afghan ambassador hoping for a LUMS-like institute eventually in Afghanistan.
 
Ghani is a realist, he's not delusional like Karzai was. He knows that the only way for Afghanistan to have peace is if it has friendly relations with it's immediate neighbors, and not some far off nation.

Things are improving, and Inshallah, both nations will prosper beside each other.
 
Of all the things its people to people contact that improves the relationship.Even better if these people are students or army cadets because these people are the possible future leaders.
 
Actually Pakistan already has lots of Afghan students

Anyway,Good developments
Most of them probably came through private means, not government sanctioned methods. They may have had to pay their way into the school system from their own pockets, or through a charity organization (which is actually quite common, from what I've heard). There are also scholarships handed out that is done unilaterally from Pakistan's side, so there is that as well.

This is different in that it is a government to government development. It's good for relations, and both nations already seeing the benefits of friendly relations between the two. Let's hope Ghani doesn't succumb to domestic (pro-India) political pressure.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 1, Members: 0, Guests: 1)


Back
Top Bottom