India, Pakistan talks amid fresh tensions
INDIA: India and Pakistan's foreign secretaries were to meet yesterday
to bolster a fragile peace dialogue undermined by political flux in Pakistan
and fresh tensions over the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
A senior Indian government official said the talks in New Delhi between
Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai and his Pakistani counterpart Jalil Abbas
Jilani had the sole aim of keeping the “dialogue process on track.”
Their meeting was to have taken place at the end of last month, but was
postponed in the uncertainty that followed the Pakistani Supreme Court's
dismissal of Yousuf Raza Gilani as prime minister.
Analysts said the upheaval in Islamabad had taken some of the momentum
out of the peace dialogue between the nuclear-armed South Asian rivals, who
have fought three wars since the sub-continent was partitioned in 1947.
Moreover, the atmosphere has been soured by India's arrest of a man
suspected of being a key handler for the 10 Pakistan-based militants who
carried out the 2008 Mumbai attacks, killing 166 people.
India says the suspect has admitted helping to coordinate the deadly
assault from a command post in Karachi, and his testimony has renewed Indian
accusations that “state elements” in Pakistan were involved.
“The blame game has started again and the secretaries' meeting comes at
a crucial juncture,” said Wilson John, a foreign policy analyst at the Observer
Research Foundation, an independent think tank in New Delhi.
“Too much heat and dust has been stirred up at various levels.” AFP
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