Saturday, July 17, 2010

Indo-Pak talks have not collapsed: Nirupama Rao

IANS, Jul 17, 2010, 01.15pm IST

NEW DELHI: Foreign secretary Nirupama Rao on Saturday rebuffed Pakistani foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi's claim that his Indian counterpart had supported him in his criticism of home secretary GK Pillai, saying "India did not express any agreement with Pakistan's comments on Pillai".

Rao also lent support to Pillai's statement ahead of the Islamabad talks that Pakistani spy agency Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) had a significant role in the Mumbai terror attack, saying that India is definitely concerned about ISI's role in 26/11.

"We are definitely concerned about the role of state actors in terrorism," Rao told a news channel in an interview.

In an interview, Pillai had stated that Lashkar-e-Taiba agent David Headley's questioning by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) had confirmed that "ISI had a much more significant role to play in the Mumbai attacks..."

"ISI was literally controlling and coordinating the attacks from the beginning till the end," Pillai had stated.

The Indian foreign secretary reiterated that the talks between the two nations had not collapsed.

"There are differences in perception, but the gap is not unbridgeable," she said.

Rao said that the tone and tenor of Qureshi's remarks could have been better.

"In diplomacy, as in life, such ups and downs are common," she said.

In another TV interview on Friday night, Rao had stressed that the India-Pakistan talks had not "collapsed" and the dialogue process between them "must go on".

She had told a news channel that Qureshi's critical remarks about Krishna had come as "a real surprise" for India.

"The comments (by Qureshi) came as a surprise, there was no real reason for the comments," the foreign secretary said.

Qureshi at a press conference in Islamabad took potshots at Krishna and launched a broadside against India's what he called "selective focus on terror". He even said the "Indian foreign minister received foreign policy directions from New Delhi repeatedly during our meeting".

India is wasting its time with Pakistan. Pakistan must be declared enemy state of India. It is Pakistan which is not allowing us to build close relations with Afghanistan. It is fully supporting the terrorists who are active in Kashmir. It is building an anti-India relationship with China. India must pay Pakistan back in the same coin. We must openly support independence movements in Pakistan. We must be prepared to cross the border to destroy Kashmir terrorist camps there. We must given America a choice - either they are with us or with Pakistan. India must arouse its nationalism to source its strength against its enemies.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Indo-Pak-talks-have-not-collapsed-Nirupama-Rao/articleshow/6180339.cms

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