ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan's Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi will visit Pakistan by "end of this week" to discuss political and economic issues between the two countries, the deputy spokesperson of Afghanistan's foreign ministry confirmed on Tuesday.
The United Nations is currently spearheading crucial talks on key issues facing Afghanistan, with representatives of several countries, including Pakistan's state minister for foreign affairs, Hina Rabbani Khar, in Doha.
The UN secretary-general hopes to "find ways" to influence the Taliban to roll back restrictions on Afghan women and girls, particularly the ban on education for women imposed by the conservative regime.
International news agency Reuters reported earlier this week that Pakistan's UN mission requested the UN Security Council to allow Muttaqi to travel to Pakistan on May 6 and 9 to meet the foreign ministers of Pakistan and China. Muttaqi has long been subjected to a travel ban, asset freeze, and arms embargo under UN Security Council sanctions.
"It is planned that at the end of this week, a political and business delegation led by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan Maulvi Amir Khan Muttaqi will go to Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan," Hafiz Zia Ahmad, deputy spokesperson for Afghanistan's foreign ministry, wrote on Twitter.
"The Afghan government wants to hold comprehensive bilateral talks on political, Pakistan-Afghanistan economic relations, regional stability and transit,"
Ahmad confirmed Muttaqi will take part in the sixth tripartite meeting of the foreign ministers of China, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. He added that the foreign ministers of China and Afghanistan will also hold separate meetings during the occasion.
The Taliban, who were snubbed by the UN for the important Doha meeting, referred to it as "ineffective and counterproductive" without the group's participation.
Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have been tense ever since the Taliban seized power in the country in 2021. Islamabad has seen a surge in attacks across Pakistan, which it blames on militants operating from Afghan soil.
Pakistan has asked Afghanistan to rein in militants it says are operating from its soil, and threatened cross-border action if attacks continue. Cross-border clashes between the two countries have also called casualties in recent months.