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National
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PM briefs President on summit
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, JULY 13. The Prime Minister, Mr Atal Behari Vajpayee,
called on the President, Mr K. R. Narayanan, today. Over a 45-
minute meeting, Mr. Vajpayee briefed him on the summit starting
tomorrow with Pakistan President, General Pervez Musharraf.
Mr. Vajpayee also had a round of last-minute meetings on the
preparations for the summit. The Governor of Jammu and Kashmir
called on him in this connection.
Speaking in Srinagar, the Chief Minister, Dr. Farooq Abdullah
expressed the hope that Mr. Vajpayee would take up the issue of
cross-border terrorism forcefully with the General. The people
wanted an end to the gun culture, he said.
The former Foreign Secretary, Mr. Jagat Mehta (who was the
Foreign Secretary when Mr. Vajpayee was the Foreign Affairs
Minister), was sent for by the Prime Minister today. A number of
issues came up for discussion. Later, officials of the Prime
Minister's Office described the meeting as ``very useful''.
Throughout the day there were consultations with the Union Home
Minister, Mr L.K. Advani, and the External Affairs Minister, Mr.
Jaswant Singh.
Despite the hectic schedule and the irritations that have come
from ``the other side'' it seems that the Prime Minister is
completely relaxed. As one official suggested, ``He did not allow
himself to be provoked even when sharp questions were asked by
Pakistani journalists who interviewed him yesterday on the
Hurriyat, alleged American pressure on India, Siachen and
Kashmir.''
The Government, it seems, is not going to be provoked into making
any retaliatory or hawkish noises. Although today there was harsh
reaction from the Congress to the reported interview given by
Gen. Musharraf to a Gulf newspaper where he had rejected the
Shimla Accord and the Lahore Declaration (that was how the
agencies reported it), sources close to Mr. Vajpayee said that it
was not being viewed by the Government as a ``rejection'' of the
two accords by Pakistan. The explanation was that Gen. Musharraf
had only stated that the two agreements had failed to produce
results because they had not addressed the ``core'' issue of
Kashmir.
The Government is trying to explain away the unpleasant rhetoric
that is coming from Islamabad as less to do with the summit and
more to do with the ``home compulsions'' of the General and the
need to address constituencies like the Hurriyat, the jehadis and
the fundamentalists.
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