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PM wants to give peace another chance: Mahajan
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, MAY 31. For the first time today, the entire Union
Cabinet heard from the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee,
the rationale behind the invitation to the Pakistan's Chief
Executive, General Pervez Musharraf. Mr. Vajpayee is understood
to have explained that the invitation - as well as the calling
off of the ``ceasefire'' in Jammu and Kashmir - was part of a
larger search for peace in the region, and should be seen as a
continuation of the ``Lahore process.''
There was, however, no discussion in the Cabinet on the subject.
The Prime Minister was heard respectfully. The Cabinet seemed
reconciled to the fait accompli of what has been seen as a volte
face. It was the Cabinet Committee on Security that had decided
on May 23 to call off the ``ceasefire'' in Jammu and Kashmir and
invite the Pakistani ruler to come to New Delhi for talks.
Briefing newspersons after the Cabinet meeting, the Minister for
Parliamentary Affairs, Mr. Pramod Mahajan, said the Prime
Minister wanted to give ``another chance'' to his peace
initiative. According to Mr. Mahajan, Mr. Vajpayee told his
Cabinet colleagues that while India was naturally in favour of
engaging a democratic set-up in Pakistan, it could not
realistically ignore the presence of a military regime there. In
the past, too, India had dealt with military regimes.
On the decision to call off the ``ceasefire,'' the Prime Minister
told the Cabinet that the unilateral restraint the security
forces had undertaken (as part of the Ramadan initiative) was not
being reciprocated by the militant groups, and, in fact, the
number of civilians killed had gone up.
One of the crucial inputs in the May 23 decision was the
perceptions and impressions gathered by the Union Home Minister,
Mr. L. K. Advani, and the acting Defence Minister, Mr. Jaswant
Singh, when they visited Srinagar on May 19.
According to Mr. Mahajan, since the Prime Minister would be
having his knee operated upon on June 7 and would require at
least three weeks thereafter to recover fully, the proposed
Vajpayee-Musharraf summit should be taking place in the middle of
July. General Musharraf has suggested four dates - June 20, June
25, end of June or early July - for the summit. As per Mr.
Mahajan's announcement, the monsoon session of Parliament could
begin on July 23. That means the summit should take place some
time in the second/third week of July.
Before the Cabinet meeting, the Prime Minister presided over
another high-level meeting that decided in principle to extend
the ceasefire in Nagaland for one year. The formulation is that
the ceasefire would extend to the Nagas living in entire
northeast, without in any way constituting a commitment to the
concept of ``Greater Nagaland'' being demanded by the dominant
rebel group, the NSCN(I-M), headed by Mr. T. Muivah.
The meeting was attended by Mr. Advani, the Army Chief, the Home
Secretary, the Director of Intelligence Bureau, Secretary (R),
and Mr. K. Padmanabhaiah, Prime Minister's envoy for the
northeast.
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