INTERNATIONAL — April 1, 2026

Termez Discussions Center on Qosh Tepa Canal and Trans-Afghan Railway

A Valdai Club session in Termez centered on the Qosh Tepa Canal's impact on Uzbekistan's water security and the Trans-Afghan railway project. Uzbekistan is negotiating diplomatically with the Taliban on water issues while advancing tripartite railway agreements.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV2 min read

Termez Discussions Center on Qosh Tepa Canal and Trans-Afghan Railway
Image courtesy Amu TV

A two-day session of the Russian Valdai International Discussion Club in Termez, Uzbekistan, focused on Afghanistan-related issues, particularly water management and transit projects.

Participants included officials, diplomats and experts from Russia and Uzbekistan. Discussions highlighted water sensitivities arising from the Qosh Tepa Canal in northern Afghanistan, which Uzbekistan views as impacting its irrigation and food security due to reliance on the Amu Darya river.

Uzbekistan has engaged in diplomatic dialogue and negotiations with the Taliban administration to seek a technical solution on water sharing. Tashkent also backs multilateral approaches through the International Fund for Saving the Aral Sea.

The session addressed the Trans-Afghan railway project, covering the route from Termez to Mazar-i-Sharif, Kabul and Peshawar, intended to enhance regional trade and establish Afghanistan as a key transit hub.

In 2025, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan signed a preliminary agreement for technical and economic studies on the railway, with estimated costs ranging from 4.8 to 6 billion dollars.

Uzbek officials stressed that stability in Afghanistan is essential for Central Asian security and serves as a foundation for broader economic cooperation.

Read the original reporting at Amu TV

Reliability assessment

Single source with direct attribution to named organization (Valdai International Discussion Club) providing concrete, checkable details on event location (Termez), participants (Russia/Uzbekistan officials), specific projects (Qosh Tepa Canal, Trans-Afghan railway route and 2025 agreement with cost estimates).

The source language reads straight.

Independent web corroboration

An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.

Across the newsrooms

Filed by

Filed under

InternationalQosh Tepa Canal, Trans-Afghan Railway, Valdai Club, Termez, Amu Darya

Spotted an error or have more on this story? Tip the desk on Telegram → or WhatsApp →.

Reader supported

Keep Ehtebar running

Every published story uses paid tools to translate reporting, compare sources, extract claims, and produce a clearer read on Afghanistan. Reader support helps keep that work independent.

€5

helps cover daily verification runs

€15

supports a week of source comparison

€50

keeps independent analysis moving