Islamabad talks ended in stalemate:
Indo- Pak diologue to continue
INDIA: Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan said Saturday they would
press ahead with a dialogue to build ties shattered by the Mumbai
carnage after talks in Islamabad ended in an acrimonious stalemate.
The statements came after a visit by Indian Foreign Minister S.M.
Krishna to Islamabad ended Friday on a sour note over what his
counterpart, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, said was India’s “selective focus on
terror”.
The dialogue process “must go on” despite the chilly atmosphere, the
Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao said.
“There is a gap in perception... but these are not unbridgeable
divides,” Rao said, but she underscored strongly that action by
Islamabad to counter Islamic militant threats against India remained New
Delhi’s top concern.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said Pakistan also
wanted the talks process to continue.
“We want dialogues, they (India) too want dialogues so when there
will be talks then we will discuss all issues,” Gilani told reporters at
Baloki, near the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore.
However, Rao told India’s NDTV network a “terror machine” directed
against India involving “state and non-state actors” continues to exist
in Pakistan.
“Serious introspection is required by Pakistan into why terror has
been used as an instrument of policy against India,” she said.
Islamabad also needs to understand “why terror threatens the very
fabric of Pakistan itself,” Rao said, referring to the slew of deadly
attacks in the country blamed on Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants.
Rao’s comments echoed statements on the eve of the talks by India’s
Home Secretary G.K. Pillai, whose accusations that Pakistan’s
intelligence service coordinated the Mumbai attacks cast a long shadow
over the Islamabad meeting.
The Economic Times accused Islamabad of pushing ties “off the
diplomatic rails... by sidelining New Delhi’s main demand for action”
against the Islamic militant perpetrators of the 2008 Mumbai attacks,
which left 166 people dead.
New Delhi, Sunday, AFP |