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Indian, Pakistani leaders meet in Egypt

India and Pakistan agree terrorism not linked to talks
India and Pakistan have agreed that action on terrorism should not be linked to peace talks between the two nuclear armed rivals, their premiers said after talks on Thursday. "Action on terrorism should not be linked to the composite dialogue process and these should not be bracketed," Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh said in a joint statement. Last November, Pakistani militants killed 166 people in a bloody attack on India's commercial capital Mumbai that left in tatters a fragile peace process launched in 2004.

Top US commander visits Pakistan
Top US commander Admiral Mike Mullen on Thursday visited a camp sheltering some of Pakistan's two million people displaced by conflict and held talks with army chiefs, the US embassy said. "Admiral Mike Mullen arrived in Islamabad for scheduled meetings with senior Pakistani officials on topics of mutual interest," said embassy spokesman Lou Fintor. "He also visited Jalozai internally displaced persons camp, where he met with camp residents and administrators," Fintor told AFP. A military spokesman said Mullen discussed "matters of mutual interest" with Pakistan's overall armed forces commander General Tariq Majid and army chief General Ashfaq Kayani. Mullen frequently visits Pakistan, which US President Barack Obama has put at the heart of the global fight against Al-Qaeda and Islamist extremists, as he seeks to reverse an increasingly deadly war in neighbouring Afghanistan. The United States backed Pakistan's military offensive against the Taliban in the Swat valley and surrounding northwest districts, launched in late April following earlier offensives, which in total displaced 1.9 million people. Islamist militants, who bitterly oppose Pakistan's alliance with the United States, whose troops are fighting a Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, carry out daily attacks in the northwest. A resumption of deadly skirmishes in the Swat valley has triggered concern about worsening security as the government returns more than 2,300 families displaced by its recent military offensive.
by Staff Writers
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 important get-together, the Non-Aligned Movement summit.

Relations between India and Pakistan, which have fought three wars, deteriorated sharply after last year's bombings in the Indian commercial capital Mumbai which killed 166 people and were blamed by New Delhi on the banned Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

It is only the second high-level talks between the two sides since the bombings.

Singh had voiced hope that Pakistan will promise action against those behind the November attacks at his meeting with Gilani.

Pakistan on Wednesday expressed some optimism over the direction relations with its neighbour were taking.

"There has recently been some forward movement in our relations with India," Gilani told summit participants.

"We hope to sustain this momentum and move towards comprehensive engagement. We believe durable peace in South Asia is achievable," he said.

The Mumbai siege left in tatters a fragile peace process launched in 2004 to resolve all outstanding issues of conflict between the neighbours, including a territorial dispute over the divided Himalayan territory of Kashmir.

Peace "will be facilitated by the resolution of all outstanding disputes, including Jammu and Kashmir," Gilani said.

Indian foreign secretary Shiv Shankar Menon has been holding talks with his Pakistani counterpart Salim Bashir since Tuesday in preparation for the meeting between the prime ministers.

Menon told a press conference on Wednesday that the talks were continuing.

"We have had good detailed discussions. We are still in the process of talking to each other," he said.

Singh has voiced hope that Pakistan will promise action against those behind the attacks when he meets Gilani for only the second high-level contact between the two sides since the Mumbai bombings.

Pakistan has said that it would "probably" put the five accused of involvement in the attacks on trial this week.

More than 50 heads of state from the developing world are gathered in Sharm to tackle the fallout from the global economic meltdown, with calls for a "new world order" to prevent a repeat of the crisis.

Cuban President Raul Castro said at the opening session on Wednesday that the financial crisis had hit developing nations the hardest.

"Every country in the world must seek just solutions to the global economic crisis," Castro told the 118-member body.

"We call for a new monetary and economic world order... we must restructure the world financial system to take into consideration the needs of developing countries."

India said members should play a bigger role on the world stage.

"Developing countries must be fully represented in the decision-making levels of international institutions," Singh said.

India, along with host Egypt, is one of the founding members of the NAM, the largest grouping of countries outside the United Nations, aimed at giving a voice to the developing world.

Founded in 1955, NAM's 118 member states represent around 56 percent of the global population. NAM states consider themselves not formally aligned with or against any major power bloc.

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US military chief warns of tough battle ahead in Afghanistan
London (AFP) July 16, 2009
The US military chief warned Thursday that Taliban militants in Afghanistan have grown more violent and better organised in recent years, and troops face "very difficult fighting" ahead. The US military faced a crucial 18-month battle to help stabilise the country for the Afghan people and stem a three-year slide in security, said Admiral Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of ... read more







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