No secrecy, just precaution, says Sharif

Process needed time, so publicity was avoided, says Pakistan PM.

December 14, 2015 02:18 am | Updated September 02, 2016 10:57 am IST - MARY (TURKMENISTAN):

(From left) Vice-President Hamid Ansari, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani and his Turkmenistan counterpart Gurbanguly Malikgulyyevich Berdimuhamedov  launch the welding process of the TAPI project in Mary, Turkmenistan, on Sunday. Photo: PTI

(From left) Vice-President Hamid Ansari, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani and his Turkmenistan counterpart Gurbanguly Malikgulyyevich Berdimuhamedov launch the welding process of the TAPI project in Mary, Turkmenistan, on Sunday. Photo: PTI

Rejecting criticism over the sudden >resumption of India-Pakistan talks , Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said that there was no “secrecy” in his >meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and in the > NSA talks in Bangkok .

Speaking exclusively to The Hindu on the sidelines of the groundbreaking ceremony for the TAPI pipeline project in Turkmenistan, Mr. Sharif said the process needed “time and patience.”

“I don’t think there is any secrecy around the process. If we didn’t announce anything in advance, it was by way of precaution,” he said, in his first comments on the talks since he and Mr. Modi met in Paris on November 30.

Mr. Sharif’s comments come just ahead of External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj’s Parliament briefing on the outcome of the dialogue in the past two weeks. Both in Pakistan and in India, the principal Opposition parties have demanded transparency and questioned the need to have kept the Paris and Bangkok meetings a secret. Two days after the NSA talks on December 6, Ms. Swaraj travelled to Islamabad, and after meeting Mr. Sharif and Foreign Affairs Adviser, Sartaj Aziz, announced the resumption of talks, now called the ‘ >comprehensive dialogue.

Foreign Secretaries S. Jaishankar and Aizaz Chaudhry are expected to meet next in Delhi in January to formalise the timetable for Secretary-level talks on various issues.

Recounting the turn of events after Mr. Modi and Mr. Sharif met on the sidelines of the >COP21 climate change conference in Paris, Mr. Sharif called the meeting “very good and very successful.”

“In that short time we were able to agree on the way forward, which led to the NSA meeting [in Bangkok]. And I think the Heart of Asia conference we held in Islamabad gave us the opportunity to take things ahead,” he said.

To another question, Mr. Sharif said: “We have just restarted so it needs time, and you must have patience. Let us hope it goes smoothly.”

*This report has been corrected for a factual error.

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