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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, July 19, 2001 |
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'We must start from Shimla, Lahore'
By Atul Aneja
NEW DELHI, JULY 18. India today declared that the draft Agra
declaration could not be the basis for further engagement with
Pakistan. New Delhi is prepared to continue the engagement with
Islamabad on the basis of the Shimla accord and the Lahore
declaration.
Official sources here said India did not see the Agra discussions
as a benchmark for resuming the next round of talks with
Pakistan. ``It is disappointing that no closure was reached on
the text of an agreement. We will have to begin again on the
basis of the existing agreements - the Shimla agreement and the
Lahore declaration'', the External Affairs Ministry spokesperson
said. Analysts interpret the official statement as the
Government's formal acknowledgement that the Agra round of talks
was unsuccessful.
Highly-placed Government sources said the decision to reject the
talks was taken during the Cabinet meeting last night. They added
that the decision was triggered by certain observations made by
the Pakistani Foreign minister, Mr. Abdul Sattar, in his
statement yesterday. Mr. Sattar had listed topics which would
comprise the structure for a ``sustained'' dialogue as well as
the mechanism for carrying it forward. He had further observed
that the draft declarations in Agra would provide a ``valuable
foundation'' for the two leaders to reach a full agreement.
Significantly, the Cabinet decision also reverses the statement
of the External Affairs Minister, Mr. Jaswant Singh, at his press
conference in Agra on Tuesday. Reiterating India's commitment to
build on the summit, Mr. Singh categorically said, ``we will pick
up the threads from the visit of the President of Pakistan.''
Apparently, India has taken exception to Pakistan's recourse to
the media for projecting its views. Asked to comment on Mr.
Sattar's observations that the media was an element of
``contemporary diplomacy,'' she dismissed his interpretation as
``novel''. Pointing to the necessity of observing confidentially,
she said that otherwise, ``bilateral confidential parleys may
very well be held in an amphitheatre with the media present all
the time.''
According to her, Pakistan needed to observe three cardinal rules
of diplomatic conduct. First, it had to uphold confidentiality
during negotiations. Second, it had to ensure that diplomatic
protocol was observed at all times. Third, the ``host as well as
the guest'' needed to exercise restraint in dealing with the
media.
Pakistan's persistence with its media offensive, overriding
India's protestations yesterday over the telecast of Gen.
Musharraf's interaction with Indian editors, further affected New
Delhi's sensitivities, the sources said. Building on its media
campaign, Pakistan today offered visas to Indian journalists
wanting to cover Gen. Musharraf's press conference in Islamabad
on Friday.
India today also took umbrage at Mr. Sattar's distinction of the
Line of Control and the International Border in dealing with the
question of cross-border terrorism. Expressing ``astonishment'',
the spokesperson asserted that ``Pakistan understands perfectly
well by what is meant by cross- border terrorism, which is
inclusive of encouraging and abetting infiltrations across the
LoC.''
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