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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, July 27, 2001 |
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Pak. to examine CBMs `on merit'
By B. Muralidhar Reddy
ISLAMABAD, JULY 26. Even as India officially conveyed the
proposals on Confidence-Building Measures (CBMs), announced in
the run-up to the Agra summit, Pakistan today maintained that it
would `examine them on merit.'
The Pakistan Foreign Ministry spokesman told a news conference
here that Islamabad had received `a number of proposals on CBMs'
from New Delhi and it was in the process of examining them. The
announcement is slightly at variance with the earlier stand of
Islamabad. When India had unveiled the CBMs before the summit,
Pakistan's response was that they should follow, rather than
precede, the summit.
In a press conference a day after the summit (July 17), the
Pakistan Foreign Minister, Mr. Abdul Sattar, had said that no
proposals on CBMs were discussed at the summit. Three days later,
at his televised news conference, the Pakistan President, Gen.
Pervez Musharraf, said that resolution of the Kashmir dispute was
the biggest CBM.
The various pre-summit Indian proposals on CBMs included a
dialogue among nuclear experts at the official level; relaxation
of visa and travel regime; fellowships to Pakistani scholars and
a policy on the release of fishermen who inadvertently strayed
into territorial waters.
At the news conference today, the spokesman did not elaborate on
the Indian proposal to send the Director-General of Military
Operations (DGMO) to discuss various issues related to border
management.
Enquiries with New Delhi revealed that some of the CBMs,
announced on the eve of the summit, were conveyed before the
summit and others after the summit. ``We have merely articulated
the CBMs already announced and given it to Islamabad in the form
of formal proposals,'' a senior diplomat said.
Western diplomats based here see a link in the relatively
flexible attitude adopted by Islamabad on the CBMs to the coming
visit of the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State, Ms. Christina
Rocca, to Pakistan. She is due here on July 30 on a five-day
official tour.
The Pakistan Foreign Office spokesman did not respond to a
question on the Home Minister, Mr. L. K. Advani's statement in
Parliament on Wednesday. Asked if the `hardliners' in India were
responsible for the two countries' failure to reach an agreement
at Agra, he merely drew attention to the observations of Gen.
Musharraf, who had, in his press conference, talked about the
`hawks' on both sides and the need to ignore them if meaningful
progress were to be made in bilateral ties.
When a pressperson wanted the spokesman to comment on a report in
an English daily which quoted Gen. Musharraf as telling his
Cabinet colleagues that hardliners in the Indian Government had
prevented the signing of a Joint Declaration at Agra, he pleaded
helplessness.
Referring to Mr. Vajpayee's statement on the summit in both
Houses of Parliament, he said Pakistan had noted India's desire
to continue the dialogue process.
There was a ``misleading impression that Pakistan has made
settlement of Jammu and Kashmir as a pre-condition for
normalisation of ties with India. The President (Gen. Musharraf)
had emphasised that movement towards settlement of Kashmir in
accordance with the wishes of people of Kashmir would allow in
tandem normalisation in other areas.''
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