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Dialogue only way forward for Pakistan, India: Gilani

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani

Top separatist urges Clinton to push for Kashmir resolution
Indian Kashmir's top separatist leader urged visiting US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Saturday to push nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan to resolve their dispute over Kashmir. "Kashmir is not a religious issue, it is not an issue of terrorism or extremism, it is a political dispute and the United States has a role to push both India and Pakistan to settle this political dispute," Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said in a statement. Mirwaiz is chairman of the All Parties Hurriyat (Freedom) Conference, the volatile region's main separatist alliance. His comments came as Clinton kicked off her Indian visit in Mumbai, scene of the attacks last year by militant gunmen that killed 166 people. India has accused Pakistan of harbouring extremists who allegedly trained, equipped and financed the militants. After the attacks, India suspended a peace dialogue with Pakistan that, among other issues, sought a resolution of the Kashmir conflict that has dominated bilateral relations since the division of the sub-continent in 1947. Both countries claim the entire region of Kashmir which is currently divided between them by a Line of Control. A 20-year Muslim insurgency has claimed 47,000 lives in the Indian-administered section. Peace in South Asia cannot be achieved "without a resolution of core issue of Kashmir," Mirwaiz said. Clinton denied Saturday that President Barack Obama's administration is pressuring India into seeking peace with Pakistan so the latter could focus entirely on beating an Islamist insurgency on its border with Afghanistan, a US priority. "The US... is very supportive of steps that the governments take but we are not in any way involved in or promoting any particular position," she told reporters. After talks Thursday in Egypt with his Pakistani counterpart Yousef Raza Gilani, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said negotiations with Pakistan would remain on hold until Islamabad takes action against the perpetrators of the Mumbai attacks.
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) July 18, 2009
Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani Saturday said that dialogue with India was the only way forward for the nuclear-armed rivals if they want to beat the militants.

"If we do not go for dialogue that means that we strengthen terrorism," Gilani told a press conference in Islamabad he had called to brief the media about his meeting this week with Indian premier Manmohan Singh.

"Therefore it is in the interest of both the countries and the way forward only is dialogue," Gilani added.

The rare meeting between the Indian and Pakistani premiers this week in Egypt ended with a pledge to cooperate on terrorism that has triggered anger and consternation back in New Delhi.

Singh faced criticism back home from the opposition and a section of the Indian media for conceding too much ground to Gilani on the sidelines of the Non-Aligned Movement summit.

A joint statement from the two leaders said that action on terrorism "should not be linked" to peace talks between the South Asian rivals.

Gilani brushed aside a Friday statement from the Indian prime minister in parliament that there would be no resumption of formal peace talks with Pakistan until Islamabad brings those behind last year's Mumbai attacks to justice.

"Whatever he (Singh) has said on the floor of the house in India, I think that is the stand which we took and I think that would really help the two countries to move forward," Gilani said.

The peace process between the neighbours was put on hold following the November 2008 attacks on India's financial and entertainment capital in which 166 people died.

New Delhi has blamed the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LET) and said it has "overwhelming evidence" that "official agencies" in Pakistan were involved in plotting and carrying out the 60-hour siege.

Gilani said Pakistan was probing the case. An anti-terrorism court in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi Saturday adjourned proceedings against five accused including the alleged mastermind Zakiduddin Lakhvi till July 25.

"We reiterated our determination to do everything possible to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai attack to justice," Gilani said referring to his meeting with Singh on Thursday.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who arrived in India late Friday, said she had been "very impressed" by the Singh-Gilani meeting and saw the joint pledge to cooperate in the fight against terrorism as a positive step.

"I really see events moving in a very positive direction," Clinton said in a pre-arrival interview with CNN-IBN television.

"In part, because of the shared sacrifice, commitment and understanding that now exists about the threats terrorists pose to both countries."

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Indian, Pakistani leaders meet in Egypt
Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt (AFP) July 16, 2009
The prime ministers of India and Pakistan met on the sidelines of a summit in Egypt on Thursday, sparking hopes of a resumption of peace talks between the nuclear rivals. Yousuf Raza Gilani of Pakistan and Manmohan Singh of India were holding talks in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, where more than 50 heads of state were meeting on the second day of the developing world's most ... read more







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