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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, August 11, 2001 |
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'Normalisation linked to cross-border terrorism'
By Nirupama Subramanian
COLOMBO, AUG. 10: While maintaining its commitment to the
continuation of the dialogue initiated at the Agra summit, India
today put across a tough message to Pakistan at the meeting of
the Foreign Secretaries of the two countries here that the
engagement would not be on its terms.
Contrary to the impression in the run-up to the Agra summit that
India was willing to concede the ``centrality'' of Kashmir in
bilateral talks by giving it the primary position in the eight-
point composite dialogue process, a strongly-worded statement
following today's meeting rejected Kashmir as the ``core'' or
``central'' issue. Instead, the statement linked
``normalisation'' of relations to the stoppage of ``cross-border
terrorism''.
It said the Indian Foreign Secretary, Ms. Chokila Iyer, conveyed
to her Pakistan counterpart, Mr. Inamul Haq, that the recent
incidents of civilian killings in Jammu and Kashmir, had created
``extremely negative sentiments'' at the public and political
level. ``Ultimately, it would be for Pakistan to choose the kind
of relationship it would like to have with India,'' the statement
declared.
Disappointing, says Haq
Reacting to the Indian statement, Mr. Haq told an international
news agency that it was ``disappointing'', particularly as both
sides had ``agreed not to air their grievances''. However, before
the Indian statement was made public, both Ms. Iyer and Mr. Haq
told journalists, as they emerged from the 75-minute meeting,
that the exchange was ``useful'' and ``positive''. ``The
importance of continuing the process from Agra has been noted by
both the sides,'' Ms. Iyer said. The Indian Foreign Secretary
also conveyed the acceptance of the invitations to the Prime
Minister and the Minister of External Affairs to visit Pakistan.
Mr. Haq said Pakistan was ``keenly looking forward'' to the
visits, the dates for which would be decided through mutual
consultation. Ms. Iyer said the two discussed the confidence
building measures announced by India before the Agra summit.
India also raised the issue of the 54 PoWs from 1971, believed to
be still held by Pakistan. Both she and Mr. Haq said the two
sides had agreed to discuss the ``impediments'' in the bilateral
relationship through further exchanges.
But the statement put out by India, which closely mirrored that
of the Prime Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, in the Lok Sabha
earlier this week, minced no words in articulating what New Delhi
considers to be the chief obstacles.
Distributed minutes after the meeting ended, it said Ms. Iyer had
asserted that the insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir ``with its
foreign mercenaries and generous assistance from abroad'' could
not be anything but ``cross-border terrorism''.
It was evident from the statement that India virtually erased the
Agra discussions at today's meeting, emphasising instead that it
would be ``necessary to observe and implement the provisions of
the Shimla Agreement and the Lahore Declaration'' for the
improvement of relations between the two countries. The statement
revealed for the first time that India had sought to incorporate
in a joint document in Agra the structure of a future dialogue
process on all issues, including meetings at the official,
ministerial and summit levels.
``We also made proposals for addressing the issue of peace and
security, including nuclear and conventional confidence building
measures, Jammu and Kashmir, terrorism, and all other issues from
the composite dialogue,'' it stated. Ms. Iyer had conveyed to Mr.
Haq that the document had to be ``abandoned'' because of
Pakistan's ``unacceptable and untenable fixation'' on Kashmir, a
reluctance to address cross-border terrorism, and a ``negative
approach'' towards the Shimla Agreement and the Lahore
Declaration.
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