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‘Ordinary Indians want peace with Pakistan’

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IKRAM JUNAIDI UPDATED about 3 hours ago
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(L-R) Ashok Malik, former ambassador Aziz Ahmed Khan and Siddharth Varadarajan participate in a talk organised by Jinnah Institute on Friday. — White Star

ISLAMABAD: Senior Indian journalist Ashok Malik, speaking at a talk organised by think tank Jinnah Institute on Friday, said most ordinary Indians want peace with Pakistan.

“However, it appears that the resolution of the Kashmir dispute is not a priority for the Modi government,” he said.

Referring to a survey carried out in India, Mr Malik said 89 per cent Indians want peace with Pakistan and 72 per cent believe in the restoration of trading ties.

He said that 20 years ago, if there was shelling at the borders, the media would not give it much importance. Today, however, it is a major issue which is highlighted in the media.

“There are 500 news channels in India which debate important issues and play a major role in shaping public opinion,” he said.

Indian visitors discuss relations with Pakistan
Mr Malik explained that over the last 10 years, discussion on Pakistan does not feature prominently in the media.

India has trading and other kinds of relationships with Nepal, Bangladesh, the Maldives, Bhutan and other countries but not with Pakistan. So, the younger generation does not give importance to Pakistan,” he said.

“However this situation can be used as an opportunity to resolve the issues between the two countries,” he said.

Senior Fellow at the Centre for Public Affairs and Critical Theory Siddharth Varadarajan said that the Indian leadership realised that little engagement with Pakistan was better than no engagement and the Indian foreign secretary’s visit to Islamabad this week has set the stage for an improved relationship between India and Pakistan.

Sharing his views on the performance of the Modi government since 2014, Mr Siddharth said Prime Minister Modi should be appreciated for increasing the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) electoral vote share from 18 per cent in 2009 to 32 per cent in 2014.

“India’s recent election has not been fought along communal lines. The support and backing of corporate India was also a key element in Prime Minister Modi’s rise to power, however one of Modi’s greatest challenges in proceeding ahead was mitigating social tensions in diverse constituencies. The more Mr. Modi’s supporters pursue hardliner policies, the greater would be the chances of social disharmony in Indian society,” he said.

“In the past, the corporate sector used to support Congress but after the 2G, 3G scams and a number of scandals, they were disappointed. Moreover Modi, during election campaign, hardly discussed cultural issues and mostly used the slogan of ‘development’. The youth was attracted by this slogan,” he said.

He said that in India, there was a general impression that Modi was only making announcements.

Moreover, he is not utilising the power of the media.

Discussing recent transformations in Indian politics, the speakers noted that while it was true the ‘Modi surge’ beginning in November 2013 had pushed the Congress to the sidelines of Indian politics, the Delhi election symbolised a huge loss for the BJP.

Published in Dawn March 7th, 2015
‘Ordinary Indians want peace with Pakistan’ - Pakistan - DAWN.COM
 
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IKRAM JUNAIDI UPDATED about 3 hours ago
23 COMMENTS
PRINT
54fa267dae8f8.jpg

(L-R) Ashok Malik, former ambassador Aziz Ahmed Khan and Siddharth Varadarajan participate in a talk organised by Jinnah Institute on Friday. — White Star

ISLAMABAD: Senior Indian journalist Ashok Malik, speaking at a talk organised by think tank Jinnah Institute on Friday, said most ordinary Indians want peace with Pakistan.

“However, it appears that the resolution of the Kashmir dispute is not a priority for the Modi government,” he said.

Referring to a survey carried out in India, Mr Malik said 89 per cent Indians want peace with Pakistan and 72 per cent believe in the restoration of trading ties.

He said that 20 years ago, if there was shelling at the borders, the media would not give it much importance. Today, however, it is a major issue which is highlighted in the media.

“There are 500 news channels in India which debate important issues and play a major role in shaping public opinion,” he said.

Indian visitors discuss relations with Pakistan
Mr Malik explained that over the last 10 years, discussion on Pakistan does not feature prominently in the media.

India has trading and other kinds of relationships with Nepal, Bangladesh, the Maldives, Bhutan and other countries but not with Pakistan. So, the younger generation does not give importance to Pakistan,” he said.

“However this situation can be used as an opportunity to resolve the issues between the two countries,” he said.

Senior Fellow at the Centre for Public Affairs and Critical Theory Siddharth Varadarajan said that the Indian leadership realised that little engagement with Pakistan was better than no engagement and the Indian foreign secretary’s visit to Islamabad this week has set the stage for an improved relationship between India and Pakistan.

Sharing his views on the performance of the Modi government since 2014, Mr Siddharth said Prime Minister Modi should be appreciated for increasing the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) electoral vote share from 18 per cent in 2009 to 32 per cent in 2014.

“India’s recent election has not been fought along communal lines. The support and backing of corporate India was also a key element in Prime Minister Modi’s rise to power, however one of Modi’s greatest challenges in proceeding ahead was mitigating social tensions in diverse constituencies. The more Mr. Modi’s supporters pursue hardliner policies, the greater would be the chances of social disharmony in Indian society,” he said.

“In the past, the corporate sector used to support Congress but after the 2G, 3G scams and a number of scandals, they were disappointed. Moreover Modi, during election campaign, hardly discussed cultural issues and mostly used the slogan of ‘development’. The youth was attracted by this slogan,” he said.

He said that in India, there was a general impression that Modi was only making announcements.

Moreover, he is not utilising the power of the media.

Discussing recent transformations in Indian politics, the speakers noted that while it was true the ‘Modi surge’ beginning in November 2013 had pushed the Congress to the sidelines of Indian politics, the Delhi election symbolised a huge loss for the BJP.

Published in Dawn March 7th, 2015
‘Ordinary Indians want peace with Pakistan’ - Pakistan - DAWN.COM
Jinah institute bunch of secular and liberal retards run this who for past 60 years are in some delusion.
 
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Because of these institutes & centers some sanity and normalcy is maintained .......otherwise the country would have been filled with types of you.

Why are you banging your heard on that large rock? You could say the most sanest things, but they will never get through to people like @Zarvan and his Mullah brigade.

Funny.
I dont know much about peace part.
But new gen Indians are not even interested in Pak issue.

So are you a old generation Indian obsessed with Pak?:lol:
 
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I am a new generation Indian. On the face of it I want peace with Pakistan.

But then I ask myself. Pakistan includes Hafiz Saeed. It includes the ISI. It includes those who give refuge to Dawood. It includes a whole lot of Jihadists who want only to kil me and my own.

So do I still want peace with Pakstan? Can I ever realistically have peace with a country where such people hold considerable sway.

No.

If asked to really introspect a bit deeper, under the thin veneer of feel-good sound bites, very few of those "89% Indians" say they want peace with Pakistan. Beause the very thought would be an anachronism, a ludicrous sentiment.

What we do want is peace with decent Pakistanis. But we want to kill the indecent ones first. So the decent ones would have to wait. And we hope they do not get in the way .....
 
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98 % belong to my type who hate your country from bottom of my hearts


And that's the only thing you are doing in real life too..

Get a decent job, bring up a family, enjoy the moments with them, raise kids, teach them well, ..... these things maybe a bit, strange for you types...... brain is just filled with poison.... hate is the only emotion, destruction is the only motive, chaos is the only goal, anarchy is the only desire.

A self realization is going happen very soon, wishing u could last that much time.
 
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Why are you banging your heard on that large rock? You could say the most sanest things, but they will never get through to people like @Zarvan and his Mullah brigade.



So are you a old generation Indian obsessed with Pak?:lol:

I am also a new gen but I am.just one guy .There is other 80 crores of youth you cant generalize them because of me.I am just odd one.
 
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"Once war has been undertaken, no peace is made by pretending there is no war"


---- Duryodhana (Mahabharata)

and yes AAM ADMI party wants peace with pak
 
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