What's new

India-Pakistan Foreign Secretaries to meet in Bhutan

Lankan Ranger

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Aug 9, 2009
Messages
12,550
Reaction score
0
India-Pakistan Foreign Secretaries to meet in Bhutan

Foreign Secretaries of India and Pakistan will meet on the sidelines of an upcoming SAARC Council of Ministers meeting in Bhutan to explore ways to take forward the stalled peace process between the two countries, official sources said on Saturday.

Pakistan will decide on accepting India's standing invitation for Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi to visit New Delhi after assessing the outcome of the talks between the Foreign Secretaries in Thimphu on the margins of the SAARC meet, which is expected to be held in February, the sources in the Pakistan government told a news agency.

They said Pakistan had decided to accept an Indian proposal for talks between the Foreign Secretaries on the sidelines of the meeting of Foreign Ministers of SAARC countries.

No dates have been announced as yet for the regional meeting though it is expected to be held in the first week of February.

Foreign Minister Qureshi, who was invited to New Delhi by his Indian counterpart SM Krishna in July last year, has said he will go ahead with the visit only if it results in "substantial, meaningful and result-oriented talks."

The visit was originally scheduled for November last year but was put off due to the ongoing chill in bilateral ties.

Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit told the media yesterday that Pakistan is willing to engage in talks with India but an agenda should first be chalked out by the Foreign Secretaries of both countries.

India suspended the composite dialogue process in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks in November 2008.

The terrorist assault on India's financial hub was blamed on Pakistan-based Lashker-e-Toiba and its front, Jamaat-ud-Dawah.

Since then, India has linked the resumption of the peace process to Pakistan taking action against the perpetrators of the Mumbai attacks and dismantling terrorist infrastructure based on its soil.

The upcoming meeting of the two Foreign Secretaries will be the first one since September last year, when they met in New York on the margins of the UN General Assembly session but were unable to make any headway in their talks.

Pakistan has been insisting on a roadmap for future engagements on issues like Kashmir, the military stand-off on Siachen glacier and differences on sharing of river waters.

India has indicated it favours a phased approach, with terrorism being among the top priorities.

External Affairs Minister Krishna yesterday renewed his invitation for Qureshi to visit New Delhi.

The two Foreign Ministers last met in Islamabad in July last year but their talks ended inconclusively.

Indo-Pak Foreign Secretaries to meet in Bhutan
 
.
Are they going to discussed the illegal indian water dams?
 
.
Are they going to discussed the illegal indian water dams?

If they were illegal it would break the Indus treaty but those dams are legal and allowed by international treaty if you have a case take it up to the relative bodies. :cheers:
 
. . .
Back
Top Bottom