Durand Line Is Official Border With Pakistan, Says Afghan Politician Mohaqiq

Afghan politician Mohammad Mohaqiq says he recognises the Durand Line as the official border with Pakistan and supports the UN-defined political geography of Afghanistan.

Afghan politician Mohammad Mohaqiq says he recognises the Durand Line as the official border with Pakistan and supports the UN-defined political geography of Afghanistan.
Mohammad Mohaqiq, leader of the People’s Islamic Unity Party of Afghanistan and a member of the National Resistance Council for the Salvation of Afghanistan, said in an interview on Sunday, April 19, that the Durand Line remains a key point of dispute between the Taliban and Pakistan. He claimed the Taliban consider about 35% of Pakistan’s territory as part of Afghanistan.
In the interview, Mohaqiq said: “We are committed to the UN’s delineation.” He compared Afghanistan’s current political map to a mulberry leaf, saying he accepts the country’s geography as it stands.
Referring to Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, the former Afghan ruler, he said that regardless of who signed the original agreement, the United Nations and the international community now recognise the Durand Line.
Mohaqiq added that those raising territorial claims against Pakistan should assess their own strength, describing Pakistan as a nuclear power and saying he does not support continuing the dispute.
In 1893, during the rule of Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, an agreement was signed between Afghanistan and British India defining the border, later known as the Durand Line after British diplomat Henry Mortimer Durand.
Like previous Afghan governments, the Taliban administration does not recognise the Durand Line as the official border. Amid rising tensions, Taliban defence minister Mullah Yaqoob has said that one of Pakistan’s demands in talks was for the Taliban to recognise the line.
Mohaqiq also said he had previously discussed the issue with former president Hamid Karzai, arguing at the time that rejecting the Durand Line was not in Afghanistan’s interest.
He recalled telling Karzai: “If we claim Attock, they [Pakistan] will come up to Matak [Northern Kabul].”
Mohaqiq said there are differing views among Afghan politicians on the Durand Line, but he has never concealed his position.