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Cross-border terrorism will be defeated: Jaswant
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, AUG. 6. The Government today made it clear it had the
``will and the strength to fight and defeat cross-border
terrorism and did not need the assistance of anybody''. The
assertion came during the External Affairs Minister, Mr. Jaswant
Singh's intervention in the Lok Sabha on the inconclusive debate
on the Agra summit.
Mr. Singh's somewhat lengthy intervention saw him strike a tough
posture on cross-border terrorism and Pakistan's fixation on
Kashmir. In an attempt at damage limitation, he also sought to
take the House into confidence on what transpired at the summit,
even as he defended the Government from the charge that it was
ill-prepared and had done little homework.
Jammu and Kashmir, Mr. Singh said, was not the cause of
Pakistan's attitude but a ``consequence of Pakistan's compulsive
approach and sustained hostility towards India which has its
seeds in the two-nation theory''. The State was the core of
India's nationhood and ``its division on grounds of religion was
unacceptable, it exemplifies the creed of secular India.''
On cross-border terrorism, he said Pakistan was ``structuring
fundamentalism and its hostility to India on a self-induced cult
of false glory, which was a path of peril and would expose
Pakistan to great social anarchy''. The Government was determined
to meet the challenge to India's territory. ``The challenge will
be met and defeated each and everytime.''
Mr. Singh said the Government not only included cross- border
terrorism in the agenda for the summit, it had also, in the
months leading to the summit, helped build international opinion
against the menace. ``Never before has terrorism been placed
Pakistan's doorstep as has been done today.''
Defending the Government's handling of the summit, the Minister
said the preparations were ``unprecedented''. Despite being
unwell, the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, read every
United Nations resolution and every document on India- Pakistan
meetings of the past.
Mr. Singh said the Opposition was selective in talking about the
preparations and pointed out that the genesis of India- China
relations began during the Congress regime. The Tashkent
agreement, he said, accepted the idea of third-party intervention
and mediation in India-Pakistan affairs, while in Shimla, the
nation gave away both its territory and the 93,000 POWs.
The decision to invite the Pakistan President, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, for talks was an attempt to give peace another chance
despite Pakistan's track record and developments such as Kargil
and Kandahar. What was set in motion at Agra was a process of
peace which had to be carried to its logical end. Placing the
onus on Pakistan to decide the kind of relations it wanted with
India, he said, ``we do not covet an inch of that country. It is
for them to decide, let the caravan of peace move forward.''
On the Government's failure to fix an agenda for the summit, he
said by its very nature it was supposed to be a retreat yet
despite ``our repeated suggestions that we had an agenda the
other side refused''. India had insisted that the agreements
reached at Shimla and Lahore form the basis of the talks and that
the dialogue should include all important issues. ``For one
reason or the other, the other side did not agree.''
JAMMU, AUG. 6. The Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama,
escaped unhurt today when some demonstrators pelted his motorcade
with stones at Digiana, 8 km from here, during the Jammu bandh,
official sources said.
The Dalai Lama was on his way to Dharamshala. The demonstrators
mistook his motorcade to be that of a Jammu and Kashmir Minister
and stoned it.
- PTI
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