The Hindu – Second chance to mend ties

Despite being attacked by some in Pakistan for being soft on India, Nawaz Sharif has been consistent in his position that he will work to improve ties between the two countries

Anita Joshua

Monday, 13 May 2013.  The hope among some in India of better bilateral relations with Pakistan under Nawaz Sharif as Prime Minister could well be the undoing of his India policy even before it is crafted. Much before his path to the Prime Minister’s house was cleared for the third time, Pakistani hawks were at him for making pro-India statements in his election rallies and interviews to the Indian media.

Ripping apart Mr. Sharif’s recent interview to CNN-IBN’s “Devil’s Advocate” and other India-related references, a report in The News said: “In his bid to appease India or vent his pent up anger on the military establishment, days before the May 11 elections, Mian Nawaz Sharif have (sic!) gone to the extent of committing that if he returns to power he would share the reports of commissions on Kargil and Mumbai incidents with New Delhi.”

For now, however, Mr. Sharif appears to be holding his ground if his remarks in an interview to the Wall Street Journal soon after establishing a decisive lead in the vote count are anything to go by. “We’ll pick the threads where we left. We want to move toward better relations with India, to resolve the remaining issues through peaceful means, including that of Kashmir.”

While no civilian government can cast its India policy in stone — as the military still has the last word on strategic affairs and foreign policy as it pertains to New Delhi, Washington, Beijing and Kabul — those who have watched his political journey from the Zia days say that he has matured as a politician and remained consistent on India.

Trade

“He is a businessman and has always believed in trade with India,” said veteran journalist M. Afzal Khan.

While Mr. Sharif always spoke out in public meetings against India when he was Chief Minister during Benazir Bhutto’s stint as premier, Mr. Khan recalled that “he would insist in private that those statements were basically political in nature for domestic consumption.”

His first stint as Prime Minister did not see much positive movement on India but in his second tenure he did make efforts resulting in Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s bus journey to Lahore and the Lahore Declaration.

Kargil upset all that but, as Mr. Khan pointed out, since then he has never spoken against India.

Indeed, Mr. Sharif has always insisted he was kept in the dark about the Pakistan Army’s Kargil adventure, though he was then the Prime Minister. However, varied accounts on what transpired in the days ahead of the intrusions, provide a more mixed picture, the latest being a book by the then Director-General of the Analysis Wing of the Inter-Services Intelligence, Shahid Aziz.

He has indicated that Mr. Sharif might not have been completely in the dark about the “Kargil misadventure” orchestrated by then Chief of Army Staff Pervez Musharraf and three other generals. The retired general recalls a colleague telling him that Mr. Sharif asked “when are you giving us Kashmir” during an informal discussion, challenging the new Prime Minister-designate’s denials.

Plus there is the growing corpus of evidence that show the behind-the-scene agreements — including pre-electoral arrangements, his party, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has with jihadi outfits, many of them with an anti-India focus. In the 2010 Punjab budget, his brother Shahbaz Sharif’s government allocated PKR 80 million to institutions linked to the Jamat-ud-Da’wah (JuD) despite it being on the United Nations’ terror list. The provincial government’s plea was that these schools and hospitals had been taken over by the administration as closing them down would be counterproductive.

How these Faustian bargains — Mr. Shahbaz Sharif himself has secured help from the banned anti-Shia outfit Sipah-e-Sahaba and its many incarnations in his elections — will impact PML(N)’s policies remains to be seen. But, Mr. Afzal Khan was optimistic. “Despite being right-leaning and his good relations with JuD chief Hafiz Saeed, Mr. Sharif never said anything against India during his entire campaign.”

No resonance

If anything, Mr. Sharif flagged Mr. Vajpayee’s Lahore bus journey as a major achievement in many of his election rallies. “He has been consistent on improving relations with India,” is a commonly heard refrain about Mr. Sharif.

In fact, there is across-the-political spectrum consensus on the need to improve relations with India.

Through the elections, there were no reports of any mainstream political party using anti-India rhetoric to garner support and Kashmir was not an issue, finding nothing more than a passing reference in most manifestos.

An attempt made by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf office-bearer Shireen Mazari to fan anti-India sentiment in Islamabad in the twilight hours of the campaign by referring to Pakistani prisoner Sanaullah, who had succumbed to his injuries in a Chandigarh hospital earlier in the day, drew no response.

If there is any issue on which bitter political rivals agree, it is on improving relations with India.

Given its support base within the trading community, the PML(N) is in favour of improving trade relations with India and has been supportive of granting India most-favoured-nation status. Its comfortable position in Parliament should allow the party to push forth with this agenda but negotiating the India relationship would remain a tightrope walk given the PML(N)’s uneasy relationship with forces in Pakistan that have always succeeded in ratcheting up the anti-India rhetoric when it suits them.

The PML(N) manifesto states that the party is committed to trade with India but will also make special efforts to resolve the Jammu & Kashmir issue in accordance with “the provisions of the relevant United Nations resolutions and the 1999 Lahore Accord and in consonance with the aspirations of the people of the territory for their inherent right of self-determination.”

Transit economy

In keeping with its trade focus, the PML(N) is also eager to take advantage of Pakistan’s location at the junction of South, West and Central Asia to develop a “transit economy” for the country. “Pakistan can also develop a flourishing transit economy because it provides the shortest land routes from Western China to the Arabian Sea, through the Gwadar Port, while linking India with Afghanistan and the Central Asian Republics (CARs) and providing land route from Iran to India and access to the CARs to the Arabian Sea and India for oil/gas pipelines.”

Non-committal on whether this could include revisiting the Afghanistan-Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement 2010 to allow India to send goods to Afghanistan and beyond through Pakistan, former Ambassador Tariq Fatemi, who was part of the manifesto drafting exercise, said: “Mr. Sharif believes the bilateral relationship should be extended to include the region as regional uplift is crucial.”

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/second-chance-to-mend-ties/article4709293.ece?homepage=true

The Tribune – Success in India-Pakistan talks not a one-day affair: Khurshid

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, March 10. Refusing to set a timeline on the possible resumption of bilateral talks with Pakistan, External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid today said success in issues involving the two neighbours cannot be achieved in a day, suggesting a long haul.

A day after he hosted lunch in Jaipur for Pakistan Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf during a private visit to offer prayers at the shrine of Sufi saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti, the minister reiterated that it was “not an official” trip for which the government extended courtesy.

However, he did stress that success on issues involving India and Pakistan cannot be achieved in a day, suggesting that a firm foundation will have to be laid by both sides to move forward.

The minister made the statement at Ghaziabad on the sidelines of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) Raising Day parade at Indirapuram today. Responding to questions on possible timelines for bilateral talks, Khurshid said he would not be able to give a timeframe.

Since the visit of then External Affairs Minister S M Krishna to Islamabad last September, progress in Indo-Pak talks hit a roadblock after the incident of mutilation of bodies of two Indian soldiers on the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir.

After the brutal incident, New Delhi lodged a strong protest stating that it cannot be business as usual and asked Islamabad to take action and issued a statement: “It should not be felt that the brazen denial and the lack of a proper response from the Government of Pakistan to our repeated demarches on this incident will be ignored and that bilateral relations could be unaffected or that there will be business as usual.”

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130311/main2.htm

The Hindu – Fresh war of words over Kashmir between India, Pakistan at UN

United Nations, 9 October 2012. India and Pakistan got into a fresh verbal duel on Kashmir at the United Nations after Islamabad made “gratuitous references” to the issue, just a week after they sparred over it at the world body.

The decolonisation agenda of the UN would be “incomplete without resolution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute,” Pakistan’s Deputy Permanent Representative Raza Bashir Tarar said during the General Debate of the Special Political and Decolonisation Committee here on Monday.

He said Pakistan is committed to finding a peaceful resolution of the issue “acceptable to all sides, especially the people of Jammu and Kashmir.”

Exercising India’s Right of Reply, First Secretary at the Indian mission Prakash Gupta said Pakistan has once again “regrettably” raised the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, which is an integral part of India.

“We reject in their entirety the untenable comments from the distinguished delegate of Pakistan, the references to Jammu and Kashmir in them, being completely irrelevant to the work of this Committee.

“The Indian Constitution guarantees fundamental rights to all its citizens. The people of Jammu and Kashmir have repeatedly expressed their free will and peacefully chosen their destiny in accordance with democratic practices and they continue to do so,” Gupta said.

In response, Tarar again took the floor and said the Indian representative has made an “untenable assertion” that the dispute of Jammu and Kashmir is irrelevant to the debate on decolonisation.

“…Jammu and Kashmir is neither an integral part of India nor has ever been so,” he claimed.

India had the final word when it exercised its second Right of Reply in response to Pakistan’s “gratuitous references.”

Mr. Gupta asserted that Jammu and Kashmir has always been an integral part of India and “we completely reject the untenable references to Jammu and Kashmir, as these do not pertain to the work of this Committee, which can be seen from the work of the Committee so far.”

The fresh war of words came just a week after External Affairs Minister S M Krishna asserted that Jammu and Kashmir is an integral part of India and termed as “unwarranted” reference by Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari in his address to the General Assembly that Kashmir is a “symbol of failure” of the UN system. (PTI)

http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/fresh-war-of-words-over-kashmir-between-india-pak-at-un/article3981414.ece

The Hindu – Mass email fakes Pakistan flag hoisting event in A.P.

M. Srinivas

Hyderabad, 19 August 2012. A wire service photograph showing Pakistanis celebrating Pakistan Independence Day in Hyderabad (Sind) with their national flag is being mischievously portrayed in a chain email message as Muslims in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, waving the Pakistani flag.”

Weaving fiction with fact, the email then details attempts by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad to disrupt an India-Pakistan friendship programme organised in the city by an NGO, the Confederation of Voluntary Associations (COVA), under the pretext that the Pakistani flag would be hoisted. In fact, no flags were hoisted there.

The email, coming in the wake of the Centre blaming Pakistan-based elements for uploading objectionable content on the Internet that painted an exaggerated picture of the violence in Assam, suggests the spreading of digital disinformation with a view to inciting religious hatred has become something of a free-for-all on this side of the border as well.

Showing Pakistan flags being waved by joyous “Indian Muslim” youth, the email with the subject ‘Muslim celebration Pakistan Independence Day in Andhra Pradesh – Hyderabad Congress Control,’ wondered why the Congress governments at the Centre and in the State could not prevent it.

A senior retired Indian Army officer, who received the mail, forwarded it to the Prime Minister’s Office, demanding a thorough probe.

However, enquiries by The Hindu revealed that the A.P. police were unaware of the mail. “We have absolutely no information about these emails,” said DCP (Central) Tarun Joshi. The Cyber Crime police too had no clue about them.

The mail with the misrepresented photograph cited a link to the url – http://www.indiandefence.com/forums/social-political-issues/21221-pakistans-independence-day-celebrations-india.html – and said “Congress Control Andhra Pradesh permits Muslims to celebrate Pakistan 65th Independence Day in Andhra Pradesh-Hyderabad. Which country in the world has a history of such shameless act and will permit this treasonable act. No country has ever been insulted like this on Independence Day.”

“What evidence we need more to believe that India being ruled by Congress cowards and ‘chamchas’ of Pakistan and Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy has given enough proof to be called as ‘….. [invectives used]. Please circulate this widely if you care for India,” the email said.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3796117.ece

Dawn – Sea change in atmospherics with India: Pakistan envoy

New Delhi, 16 July 2012. Pakistan’s new envoy in India Salman Bashir sees a sea change in the atmospherics with India and he told an Indian news channel on Sunday that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s likely visit to Islamabad would not only cement the ties but take them substantially forward.

“I think the atmospherics have witnessed a sea change,” Mr Bashir told TV anchor Karan Thapar a day after presenting his credentials to Indian President Pratibha Patil.

“Let me say that it was in Thimpu when both our prime ministers met and had a plus one-hour conversation and then later they called us and briefed us. And it was Prime Minister Manmohan Singh who said that we should invest in building trusts by having frequent visits, exchanges at all levels. I think that is happening and that is huge in terms of where we were.”

Mr Bashir reiterated Pakistan’s offer to help India with a joint probe into the Abu Jindal affair but described as incredible the Indian suggestion that the alleged Mumbai terror mastermind was helped in any way by Pakistani officials in plotting the outrage.

“As I said if our own army headquarters are attacked, if ISI offices are attacked then I think it is really unbelievable, incredible to allege that Pakistani state, institutes have been involved in this. We ought to look at the situation very objectively in our respect of national interests,” Mr Bashir said.

Pakistan was very serious about speeding up the stalled trial of the existing suspects in the Mumbai attack “and anything that has got to do with terror”. On the last count a court had intervened to set free a detained suspect. “And as you know Pakistan has a very independent judiciary, number one. Number two, I think, I ought to mention, you know, if we get to cooperate like this particular issue at least 25 plus documents have been exchanged by both sides, 12 dossiers from India, 13 from Pakistan. That’s the real stuff that is how we should proceed.

Now judiciary has its own parameters and the fact is that the prosecution that is the government has done its best and will continue to persist to ensure that justice finally prevails.”

He said while the courts could be tardy investigating agencies were not always sprinting.“The point is that some of these things like the Samjhauta thing that took place in 2007 is yet under investigation. And I think we ought to look at the spirit, we ought to be fixated on the objects that we need to achieve and not get into forensics of a particular situation.”

Mr Bashir played down the importance of any specific model for the India-Pakistan dialogue to pursue.

“You mentioned India-China model, there is also the Pakistan-China model, there is also the China-Japan model, you know we have models in the present day and age. I think the world has changed, changing fast, the region is changing fast. There are lot of opportunities between Pakistan and India.”

Responding to a question that many Indians looked at the recent joint statement issued by the foreign secretaries and saw Kashmir was point number six under terror. Did it indicate that both countries are learning to handle Kashmir with less acrimony and more accommodation? “I agree with you, I think yes,” Mr Bashir replied.

On the Indian prime minister’s possible visit, widely seen as likely this year, he said: “I certainly agree that a visit by the Prime Minister of India would go a long way in not only cementing, but also taking the relationship forward.”

http://dawn.com/2012/07/16/sea-change-in-atmospherics-with-india-pak-envoy/

The Hindu – Pakistan Rangers team arrives for talks with BSF

New Delhi, 1 July 2012. A high-level delegation comprising Pakistan Rangers and Interior Ministry officials today arrived in New Delhi for five-day talks with the Border Security Force (BSF) to sort out border-related issues.

The 18-member delegation, led by Pakistan Rangers Director General (Sindh) Maj Gen Rizwan Akhtar, was received by Border Security Force chief U K Bansal and senior officials of the force as they landed here from Amritsar after entering India through the Wagah border in the morning.

The Pakistan delegation also comprises the second Rangers DG (Punjab) Maj Gen Mian Muhammad Hilal Hussain, Additional Secretary in the Pakistan Interior Ministry Najibullah Khan and other senior officials.

The top brass of both the border guarding forces are meeting in Delhi for the first time and the talks are aimed at thrashing out a host of issues including recent incidents of firing and ceasefire violations by Pakistan along the Indo-Pak border.

Issues to be discussed

BSF, according to sources, is expected to flag a number of issues to the visiting team which include unprovoked firing by Pakistan troops in Jammu and Sialkot sectors, death of two BSF personnel in the last few months because of sniper firing and a spurt in the smuggling of narcotic drugs from across the border.

The BSF delegation will also include senior officials from the Ministry of Home Affairs, PWD officials of the Punjab government, sleuths of the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) and officials from the Survey of India.

The Indian side would also raise the issue of illegal crossing of Pakistani nationals into Indian territory and the return of inadvertent crossers, arrest of fishermen and confiscation their fishing boats off the Gujarat coast and construction of unauthorised defence infrastructure along the International Border (IB).

The talks will begin tomorrow at the BSF headquarters here after a ceremonial guard of honour is accorded by the Indian border guards to the visiting delegation.

A joint record of discussions will also be signed on July 5, when the talks conclude.

Establishing a hotline between the force commanders will also be discussed at the meet, the sources said.

Earlier, talks between field commanders of the forces used to take place in cities like Jalandhar, Amritsar and Chandigarh.

Both the forces have a tradition of holding bi-annual talks, with each side visiting the other country once-an-year.

Regular flag meetings are held by local commanders on a need and emergency basis.

The delegation was brought in two batches by a special BSF plane from Amritsar. The Pakistan Rangers delegation has also been accorded top-level security by BSF and commandos of Delhi Police, the sources said.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3591605.ece

The Hindu – ‘Curb anti-India terror for biliateral ties to progress’

Aarti Dhar

New Delhi, April 25, 2012. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has told the Pakistani President, Asif Ali Zardari that firm action needs to be taken against anti-India terrorism originating from Pakistan to allow forward movement in the bilateral relationship.

Making a suo motu statement in the Lok Sabha on Mr. Zardari’s visit and his meeting with Dr. Singh here on April 8, External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna said it was made clear to Pakistan that India’s concerns on terrorism had to be addressed if the people of the country are to support and sustain progress in bilateral relations.

Dr. Singh referred to public activities of Lashkar-e-Taiba founder Hafiz Saeed and Mr. Zardari said the matter needed to be discussed further, Mr Krishna said.

Giving details of the 40-minute meeting between the two leaders on April 8, Mr. Krishna said both felt that “we need to move forward step-by-step and find pragmatic and mutually- acceptable solutions’’ to issues like Sir Creek, Siachen and Kashmir.

They noted that there had been a steady progress in bilateral dialogue process which resumed last year and that it would continue as planned in the months to come, he said.

Dr. Singh and Mr. Zardari also discussed terrorism and the Prime Minister told the Pakistan President that “there is need to take firm action to curb terrorism to enable us to make forward movement in the bilateral relationship,” Mr. Krishna said.

Mr. Krishna said Dr. Singh had conveyed to Mr. Zardari that “it was imperative to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai attack to justice and prevent activities aimed against India from Pakistani soil. In this context, he also mentioned the activities of Hafiz Saeed carried out in public.

“It would be evident that our concerns on terrorism had to be addressed if the people of India are to support and sustain progress in bilateral relations,” he said.

Mr. Zardari referred to judicial processes against Saeed and said the matter needed to be discussed further between the two governments, the External Affairs Minister said, adding it was noted that Home Secretaries are due to meet shortly and they would be discussing it further.

Zardari invites Manmohan

He said that during the meeting, Mr. Zardari invited the Prime Minister to visit Pakistan which was accepted with “pleasure” and that diplomatic channels would be used to work out mutually-acceptable dates and substantive preparations for that visit.

However, the Bharatiya Janata Party sought to know why the Prime Minister was not making the statement on Mr. Zardari’s visit and questioned his “continued and persistent absence” from the House.

The Prime Minister expressed appreciation of the fact that Pakistan has moved forward on trade-related issues and both the leaders felt that the two countries should tap the considerable potential of bilateral economic and trade ties for progress and prosperity of the two peoples.

Discussing developments in the region, the two leaders agreed to use the potential of regional cooperation for economic development of people of both countries, Mr. Krishna said.

“It was clear from the conversation that both countries consider the dialogue process and the improvement of bilateral relations as being in the mutual interest of the people of India and Pakistan,” the Minister said.

The two leaders felt that priority needed to be given to issues of people-to-people contacts and in this context, they decided that a liberalised visa agreement which has been worked out should be signed during the next meeting of Home/Interior Secretaries, he said.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3352955.ece

The Hindu – Manmohan brings up Saeed issue ‘upfront’ with Zardari

Sandeep Dikshit

New Delhi, 8 April 2012. Promising the prospect of continuous high-level engagements instead of sporadic one-off meetings, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Sunday held talks on a number of issues, including action against Jama’at-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed.

Though Saeed was not the dominant subject, it was mentioned “upfront” by Dr. Singh. Dr. Singh emphasised need to prosecute Saeed, the alleged strategist behind the 2008 Mumbai attacks, during the 40-minute one-to-one talks. He said action against all those involved in the terror attacks in India would be a major issue by which people here would judge their ties with Pakistan.

Mr. Zardari referred to the legal issues involved and both leaders agreed that a structured discussion on Saeed could be held during the coming Home Secretary-level talks in Islamabad. They were also hopeful of the meeting easing the onerous curbs on travel that had stifled people-to-people interaction, Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai told journalists.

Mr. Zardari had primarily come to pay obeisance at the dargah of Sufi saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer and accommodated the Delhi leg of his visit following a request from the Indian side.

While India seemed to highlight terror and trade, Mr. Zardari felt both sides needed to resolve the disputes over Kashmir, the Siachen glacier and Sir Creek. But both leaders agreed that they should proceed “step by step” in repairing the ties.

The two leaders covered all aspects of relationship as well as regional and global issues of common interest and noted the positive signs that emerged after the dialogue resumed — peace on the border, fewer incidents of cross-border terror, end to slanging matches at the governmental level and attempts to normalise trade.

They expect interactions between the Commerce Ministers and Secretaries to move ahead with the next identified lot of trade-enhancing measures, including a shorter negative list of imported items from Pakistan.

“We are willing to find practical and pragmatic solutions to all our issues. That is the message President Zardari and I wish to convey,” Dr. Singh said in a brief statement to the media.

Mr. Zardari responded in a similar vein, saying discussions were held on “all topics that we could have spoken about.”

Some issues such as that of imprisoned Pakistan biologist Khalil Chishti were raised at a small lunch that followed the talks.

Dr. Singh regretted the death of a large number of Pakistani soldiers at Siachen. He said India would be happy to provide any humanitarian assistance Pakistan required.

On Mr. Zardari’s invitation to Dr. Singh to visit Islamabad, sources in the Ministry of External Affairs said they expected the dialogue process to make the kind of solid enough progress that would make it possible.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3293513.ece?homepage=true

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