Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
India

Pakistan Invite To Hurriyat Aimed To Scuttle Talks: India

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Aug, 2015 10:43 AM
    Pakistan's invite to Kashmiri separatist leaders ahead of the NSA talks was "designed to scuttle" the August 23-24 parley, and follows a typical pattern the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment has been following since the Ufa talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif to heighten tension, sources said on Wednesday.
     
    The government was adopting a "wait and watch" mode and is keeping "all its options open" on the slated talks in New Delhi between India's National Security Advisor Ajit Doval and his Pakistani counterpart Sartaj Aziz.
     
    The July 10 talks in Ufa, Russia, brought in a sense of bonhomie between the two neighbours, with a joint statement issued, which included the NSA talks in New Delhi to discuss the issue of terrorism.
     
    But immediately after that, tension was ratcheted up by Pakistan over the Ufa meeting, with cross border firings, in which mortar shells were used, then the Gurdaspur and Udhampur attacks followed, and the latest was the invite to the Hurriyat on August 23 to meet Aziz.
     
    "The game plan is very clear - to scuttle the talks from day one," said the sources, adding that they were watching to see how the situation evolves.
     
    "We are monitoring the situation, and will respond appropriately," the sources said, but declined to elaborate on what it means by "appropriately".
     
    Aziz also took "20 days" to confirm if he would attend the talks, adding to the atmosphere of uncertainty.
     
    Since Kashmir is not to be discussed between the two NSAs, inviting the Kashmiri separatists does not really make sense.
     
     
    While India maintains that talks and terror cannot go together, it was not shying from talks on terror, said the sources.
     
    India had called off the foreign secretary-level talks on August 25 last year after the Pakistani envoy met the Kashmiri separatists ahead of the meeting, despite India requesting him not to do so and warning that it would adversely impact the talks.
     
    But in this case, the meeting is yet to take place between Aziz and the separatists on August 23.
     
    Pakistan's ratcheting up of tension comes even it is on losing ground among countries in the region.
     
    Afghanistan has openly hit out at Pakistan for terror attacks, with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, in a series of tweets on August 10, asking Pakistan to refrain from launching terror attacks on his country.
     
    During Prime Minister Modi's visit, India and the United Arab Emirates, a former close friend of Pakistan, issued a joint statement on terror that in clear terms speaks against nations exporting terror in the name of religion and calls for the dismantling of terrorism infrastructure and bring perpetrators to justice.
     
    Separatist leaders in Jammu and Kashmir on Wednesday said the Pakistan envoy in Delhi invited them for talks with Sartaj Aziz before he holds talks with his Indian counterpart.
     
     
    Both the factions of the Hurriyat Conference headed by Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and other separatist leaders such as Yasin Malik and Naeem Khan have been invited by Pakistan High Commissioner Abdul Basit for talks on August 23.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Typical Earth Citizen Will Soon Be Indian: Organizers Of New Book Prize

    Typical Earth Citizen Will Soon Be Indian: Organizers Of New Book Prize
    By 2030, the average citizen of planet Earth will be an Indian man in his mid-20s. But few people in the international creative industries realize this and so are still creating books, movies and music for the shrinking, over-saturated Western market

    Typical Earth Citizen Will Soon Be Indian: Organizers Of New Book Prize

    India-Pakistan Relations Like 'Saas-Bahu', Says Pak Envoy; Apologises

    India-Pakistan Relations Like 'Saas-Bahu', Says Pak Envoy; Apologises
    "Indo-Pakistan relation is riddled with conflicts and issues. Despite the abundance of mutual goodwill, we have not allowed this relation to grow as normal." Basit said here at an event.

    India-Pakistan Relations Like 'Saas-Bahu', Says Pak Envoy; Apologises

    Modi, Rajnath, Anna Hazare To Visit Punjab

    Modi, Rajnath, Anna Hazare To Visit Punjab
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will pay tributes on March 23 to freedom struggle martyrs Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev at Hussainiwala in Punjab, along the India-Pakistan border. Home Minister Rajnath Singh and social activist Anna Hazare will also visit the state in the coming days.

    Modi, Rajnath, Anna Hazare To Visit Punjab

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan
    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit on Wednesday invited West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to Pakistan and said she "readily agreed" to student exchange programmes between her state and Pakistan.

    Pakistan's High Commissioner Abdul Basit Invites Mamata To Pakistan

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review
    Mahasabha president Kushaldeep Dhillon said legal options would be explored to defend the case, and blasted the Modi government for "deliberately weakening the case" in the court by not presenting the "true facts".

    Indian Supreme Court Quashes Jat Reservation, Shocked Community To Seek Review

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National
    A month after it took power in Delhi after crushing the BJP and the Congress, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) announced on Tuesday that it has decided to go national.

    After Delhi Success, AAP To Go National