Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

PM Modi Makes Surprise Pakistan Visit, Pak Welcomes India's Initiative

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Dec, 2015 03:33 PM
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi returned to New Delhi on Friday from Kabul with a dramatic surprise stopover in Lahore where he and his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif vowed to pursue the derailed bilateral peace process.
     
    During the stop over at Lahore, Modi and Sharif spent some 90 minutes at Sharif's ancestral residence in Raiwind town, about 40 km from Lahore, and decided to continue the suspended dialogue between the two countries after months of border tension.
     
    It was a telephone call from Modi from Kabul greeting Sharif on his birthday which triggered the dramatic journey -- his first to Pakistan and the first by any Indian prime minister in 11 years.
     
    Sharif had attended Modi's oath taking in New Delhi in May 2014.
     
    A Pakistani official said Modi also blessed the granddaughter of Sharif on her wedding. "Modi had no clue about the wedding," he said.
     
    The Indian leader, who sipped Kashmiri tea while meeting Sharif, also met the Pakistani leader's mother.
     
    Modi reportedly told Sharif that it was important for the leadership of the two countries to understand each other's position. The Pakistani media said the two leaders had decided to take forward their bilateral relations for the benefit of South Asia.
     
    Modi and Sharif agreed to promote people-to-people contacts and confidence building measures.
     
    After returning home, Modi tweeted: "Spent a warm evening with Sharif family at their family home. Nawaz Sahab's birthday & granddaughter's marriage made it a double celebration".
     
    He said he was touched by Sharif's "affection" towards former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and said he had recalled their interactions and "asked me to convey his regards to Atal ji".
     
    He also said he was "personally touched by Nawaz Sharif Sahab 's gesture of welcoming me at Lahore airport and coming to the airport when I left".
     
    Sharif and his brother and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif were among the VIPs who received Modi at the Allama Iqbal International Airport as Modi landed in an Indian Air Force plane. The two leaders then took a helicopter to Raiwind.
     
    Geo TV reported that the visit "was not that surprising" as the Lahore Air Traffic Control had been told about it on Thursday.
     
    But few in India and Pakistan knew about the programme, which came at a time when bilateral relations have shown definite improvement after months of tension and border clashes.
     
    The Pakistan Air Force presented a guard of honour for Modi.
     
    The Pakistan government welcomed the development with Foreign Secretary Aizaz Chaudhry describing it as a goodwill gesture on the part of the Indian prime minister.
     
    Modi and Sharif had fleetingly met at the Paris Climate Summit on November 30, preparing the atmosphere for a resumption of the stalled bilateral dialogue.
     
    Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, who accompanied Modi to Lahore, met his Pakistani counterpart in Bangkok earlier this month. This was followed by External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's visit to Islamabad.
     
    The two foreign secretaries are set to meet in January, also in the Pakistani capital.
     
    Hours before he left Kabul for Lahore, Modi addressed the Afghan parliament and blasted Pakistan - but without naming the country - for sponsoring terrorism in Afghanistan.
     
    "Terror and violence cannot be the instrument to shape Afghanistan's future or dictate the choices Afghans make," Modi told Afghan MPs. Modi reached Kabul early on Friday after a two-day visit to Russia.
     
    In an obvious reference to Pakistan, Modi said there were "some who did not want us to be here".
     
    "There were those who saw sinister designs in our presence here. There are others who were uneasy at the strength of our partnership. Some even tried to discourage us."
     
    At the same time, Modi said Pakistan must act like a bridge between South Asia and Afghanistan.
     
    "All of us in the region - India, Pakistan, Iran and others - must unite, in trust and cooperation, behind this common purpose and in recognition of our common destiny."
     
    Ahead of his address, he and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani jointly inaugurated Afghanistan's new parliament building which was constructed with Indian assistance of $90 million.
     
    After arriving in Kabul from Moscow early Friday morning, Modi and Ghani held delegation-level talks over breakfast.
     
    The Indian prime minister also met Afghanistan's Chief Executive Officer Abdullah Abdullah and former president Hamid Karzai.
     
    Modi had left on Wednesday for a two-day visit to Russia for the annual summit-level meeting during which the two countries signed 16 agreements, including those related to defence and nuclear production.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Canadian Ministers Harjit Sajjan, John McCallum Tour Syrian Refugee Camp In Jordan

    Canadian Ministers Harjit Sajjan, John McCallum Tour Syrian Refugee Camp In Jordan
    The Ministers made this trip to experience first-hand the situation on the ground, as the Government of Canada implements its commitment to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada.

    Canadian Ministers Harjit Sajjan, John McCallum Tour Syrian Refugee Camp In Jordan

    Mass Shooting In Southern California City Of San Bernardino: 14 Killed

    Mass Shooting In Southern California City Of San Bernardino: 14 Killed
    The San Bernardino City Fire Department said via its Twitter account that it was responding to reports of 20 victims.

    Mass Shooting In Southern California City Of San Bernardino: 14 Killed

    Four PIOs Named Among 100 Leading Global Thinkers

    Four PIOs Named Among 100 Leading Global Thinkers
    Four persons of Indian origin are featured in Foreign Policy magazine's list of 100 Leading Global Thinkers who have generated ideas that could promise humankind a better future.

    Four PIOs Named Among 100 Leading Global Thinkers

    'India Can Learn Perils Of Intolerance From Pakistan'

    'India Can Learn Perils Of Intolerance From Pakistan'
    The film, which has not been screened in Pakistan yet, has touched a chord with Pakistanis across the globe, because it spells out how they are themselves victims of extremism.

    'India Can Learn Perils Of Intolerance From Pakistan'

    Pakistan Hangs Four Peshawar School Attackers

    Pakistan Hangs Four Peshawar School Attackers
    Pakistan early Wednesday hanged four convicted terrorists linked to last December's massacre at an army school which left more than 150 people dead, mostly school children.

    Pakistan Hangs Four Peshawar School Attackers

    Plea Deal In Works For Canadian Teen Charged In Double Killing In Florida

    Plea Deal In Works For Canadian Teen Charged In Double Killing In Florida
      Marc Wabafiyebazu, 15, is expected to return to court in two weeks for a hearing in which a plea deal could be reached.

    Plea Deal In Works For Canadian Teen Charged In Double Killing In Florida