GUNNER
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Pakistan Proposes Removing Heavy Guns From LOC
By Tom Wright
Pakistan has proposed the removal of heavy artillery from the de facto border in Kashmir, the latest in small gestures that both sides are hoping will facilitate broader moves forward in peace talks during 2012.
Pakistan made the proposal Monday during talks on conventional weapons between Indian and Pakistan foreign ministry officials and experts in Islamabad. The talks move on to discuss nuclear weapons Tuesday.
The talks are a resumption of regular discussions on armaments and nuclear weapons that were put on hold after the Mumbai attacks in 2008, during which 10 Pakistan gunmen killed more than 160 people, mostly Indians.
Pakistan suggested that artillery of greater than 120 millimeters be moved 30 kilometers from the Line of Control, the cease-fire line that divides the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir. There are regular firing incidents over the LOC, and both sides regularly claim deaths of soldiers due to shooting from the other side of the frontier.
Hopefully, removing the guns would help to reduce such deaths, says Abdul Basit, a Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman. An Indian response on the proposal was not immediately available.
Pakistan Proposes Removing Heavy Guns From LOC - India Real Time - WSJ
By Tom Wright
Pakistan has proposed the removal of heavy artillery from the de facto border in Kashmir, the latest in small gestures that both sides are hoping will facilitate broader moves forward in peace talks during 2012.
Pakistan made the proposal Monday during talks on conventional weapons between Indian and Pakistan foreign ministry officials and experts in Islamabad. The talks move on to discuss nuclear weapons Tuesday.
The talks are a resumption of regular discussions on armaments and nuclear weapons that were put on hold after the Mumbai attacks in 2008, during which 10 Pakistan gunmen killed more than 160 people, mostly Indians.
Pakistan suggested that artillery of greater than 120 millimeters be moved 30 kilometers from the Line of Control, the cease-fire line that divides the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir. There are regular firing incidents over the LOC, and both sides regularly claim deaths of soldiers due to shooting from the other side of the frontier.
Hopefully, removing the guns would help to reduce such deaths, says Abdul Basit, a Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman. An Indian response on the proposal was not immediately available.
Pakistan Proposes Removing Heavy Guns From LOC - India Real Time - WSJ