Afghanistan wants permanent and dignified peace: President Ashraf Ghani

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KABUL, 28 February, 2021, (TON): Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani said on Saturday that the international community has kept the country's citizens away from their fundamental rights of peace during the last four decades, reiterating that the people now want permanent and dignified peace. 

Addressing a ceremony on Armed Forces Day, Ghani said Afghan security forces have played a prominent role in fighting international terrorism and that they can protect the values the country has achieved over the last 20 years. 

Referring to his recent address to the UN Security Council, Ghani said: "My main sentence was that for the last 40 years, the international community has kept a massive nation away from their fundamental right which is peace and this is unacceptable." 

"We want peace and we want dignified peace and a peace that is ensured by the power of our security and defense forces and with the will of the people. This peace will come," he said. 

Ghani said the violence must end and that there should be no more bloodshed and no one should remain deprived of education anymore. 

"The people of Afghanistan have elected their government and president and they will elect the next president of Afghanistan," Ghani added. 

"It is the right of the nation and the security and defense forces will prove that change will be legal and based on the nation's will; otherwise, the tenure of the Republic is clear." 

He said that the Afghan security and defense forces are conducting over 90 per cent of counterterrorism operations. 

"Today's Afghanistan is not the one it was in the past, the one that was protected by others. Today, you are safeguarding it. We are very close to self-reliance," he said. 

Afghanistan has been in long conflict for almost thirty-five years, which has seriously hampered poverty reduction and development, strained the fabric of society and depleted its coping mechanisms. Internal conflict and the Soviet invasion in Afghanistan started waves of migration. Most Afghans fled to the neighboring nations of Pakistan and Iran. The invasion also caused massive internal migration within the country's own borders.

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