Ah, denial again. Oh C'mon man, be a man and accept that faults lies with you (Pakistan state).
How can th efault lie with us when there is obviously no damning evidence to implicate Saeed?
Can you show me this damind evidence or provide a link to it, because so far the evidence mentioned by Lamayuru falls woefully short.
So it is not Pakistan that is in denial, but rather India, that wants Pakistan to convict a man just on what amounts to her say so.
You say that evidence is lacking even after presenting all the evidence that Indian authorities collected. Apparently the Indian authorities are incompetent because the evidences collected are discarded as not quite enough by the superior Pakistani authorities, the very authorities who have an excellent track record of nabbing terrorists and bringing them to book. Oh history is replete with numerous instances wherein Pak authorities have nabbed many a terrorists and sentenced them successfully. The irony is not lost on worlds' observers.
What irony? The evidence provided by India is, I thought, summarized by Lamayuru here, and is not conclusive or damning by any means.
That's the primary reason why Indians refused for a joint-investigation team. Who's to say that evidence collected will not be transferred to the terrorists by 'rouges' in your team and help them escape.
I suspect the Indians did not want a joint investigative team because then they woul dnot have been able to make a scapegoat out of Pakistan for political purposes, and then they would not be able to argue that Pakistan is not investigating, since this very miserable excuse of evidence would have resulted in Saeed being let off, as is the case now. and the 'joint investigative team comprising India', would have left India with with no one to blame.
Happened during the Kandahar hijacking of IA flight. No matter how much you may want to remain in a state of denial, the truth is out there for everyone to see, and that's why Pakistan finds itself in a situation as it is in today. Give me any other sane reason to the contrary.
Kandahar hijacking was between you and Afganistan, and your government was responsible for releasing whoever you did release. Don't blame us for your decisions.
You are not obliged by any international laws to accept any evidence pointed out to you and act accordingly, and you do choose not to obey. But this denial and arrogance of brushing off painstaking work by investigators from around the globe will harm Pak interests in the long run.
Oh we accepted the evidence, the problem is that it just isn't even close to enough for convicting Saeed. The evidence against the two masterminds, Shaha and Lakhvi (among others), we are using to prosecute.
Now this may happen in India, where evidence is concocted or the judiciary passes guilty verdicts against so called terrorists on the flimsiest of pretexts, but don't expect Pakistan to follow your example here.
Again, the evidence India has collected, if not more than what Lamayuru mentioned, is nowhere close to damning or enough.