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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, August 08, 2001 |
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Preparations on for India, Pak. talks
By Nirupama Subramanian
COLOMBO, AUG. 7. Preparations are under way here for the
bilateral meeting between the Foreign Secretaries of India and
Pakistan on the sidelines of the SAARC standing committee meeting
here on August 9 and 10.
The Foreign Secretary, Ms. Chokila Iyer, is expected to arrive
here on Wednesday evening. Officials said the date and time of
the meeting between Ms. Iyer and her Pakistani counterpart, Mr.
Inamul Haq, the first official high-level exchange between the
two countries after the Agra summit, were being worked out.
The meeting will take place in the backdrop of the Prime
Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee's statement in the Lok Sabha
today that India would find ways to improve relations with
Pakistan despite the failure of the summit, but not on
Islamabad's terms.
The External Affairs Ministry spokesperson said in New Delhi on
Monday that the Foreign Secretaries would discuss all issues
relating to bilateral relations at their meeting in the Sri
Lankan capital.
Meanwhile, SAARC officials from member countries today began
preparatory sessions for the standing committee meeting. The
committee, which is the SAARC charter body of the Foreign
Secretaries of member countries, is expected to discuss dates for
the long-postponed Kathmandu summit, officials said.
The summit was to be held in November 1999, but was put off after
India vetoed it on the ground that it could not share a platform
with Gen. Pervez Musharraf, who had then newly captured power in
Pakistan.
Despite the failure of the Agra summit to make any dramatic
breakthrough in the relations between the two countries, the
atmosphere is believed to have thawed enough for there no longer
seems to be any objections from any quarter to holding the
summit.
SAARC officials said it was now a question of finalising the
dates for the summit. The Foreign Secretary of Nepal is expected
to propose the dates at the standing committee meeting.
Bombing continues
Sri Lanka's Air Force, badly hit by an attack on its main air
base by the LTTE two weeks ago, carried out yet another bombing
mission in the northeast today.
A Defence Ministry release said Kfir bombers destroyed an LTTE
base in the Thoppigala jungles in the eastern district of
Batticaloa today. The Israeli-made bombers engaged LTTE bunker
lines in Pallai in the northern Jaffna peninsula on Monday.
``Pilots confirm that the mission was very successful,'' the
release added.
The Air Force appears to be making the point that its operational
capability remains unaffected despite the devastating attack on
the Katunayake air base on July 24.
Suicide cadres of the LTTE attacked the air base and the
adjoining civilian international airport on July 24, destroying
eight military aircraft, including two Kfirs. Several other
military aircraft, including bombers, are said to have been
damaged by machine gun fire during the attack.
The Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation today said that a team
from Israel had arrived to assess the possibilities of carrying
out repairs on the damaged aircraft.
Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan Airlines has written off one of the
three Airbus aircraft damaged in the attack after assessment
teams pronounced it beyond repair. Three other Airbus planes were
completely destroyed during the attack.
Reports from Jaffna said a massive manhunt had been launched for
four prisoners who escaped from the district jail on Monday
night. The jail houses around 100 prisoners, many of them picked
up by security forces on suspicion of being LTTE cadres.
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