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HomeDiplomacyNo interest in meeting Pramila Jayapal, Jaishankar says after cancelling meet with...

No interest in meeting Pramila Jayapal, Jaishankar says after cancelling meet with US panel

Jaishankar was to meet US lawmakers' committee that included Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, who has introduced a resolution to lift restrictions in Kashmir.

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New Delhi: Union External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar cancelled his meeting with US lawmakers after they refused to exclude from their delegation Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, who had earlier introduced a resolution urging India to lift bans in Kashmir.

According to an NDTV report, Jaishankar was going to meet the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Eliot L. Engel, the committee’s top Republican, Michael McCaul (Tex.), and others, including Pramila Jayapal, this week in Washington.

Jaishankar is in the US for the 2+2 dialogue.

Indian officials had earlier demanded cancellation of the meeting if the committee included Jayapal, which was refused by Engel.

“I am aware of the draft resolution. I don’t think it is a fair understanding of the situation in Jammu and Kashmir or fair characterisation of what the Indian government is doing. I have no interest in meeting her,” Jaishankar told new agency ANI.

Meanwhile, Jayapal also responded saying the cancellation was “deeply disturbing” and only furthers the idea that the “Indian government isn’t willing to listen to any dissent at all”.


Also read: Respect India’s national integrity & unity, Jaishankar tells Canada during J&K discussion


Jayapal also spoke about NRC, situation of minorities

Jayapal is the first Indo-American representative from Washington in the US Congress. She recently introduced a bi-partisan resolution urging the Indian government to lift all restrictions in Jammu and Kashmir, which have been in place since the scrapping of Article 370 on 5 August.

Jayapal had introduced the resolution, co-sponsored by Republican Steve Watkins, that urged India to lift the communication clampdown, release political detainees and “preserve religious freedom for all residents” in Jammu and Kashmir.

In September, Jayapal, along with senator James McGovern, had written to US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to “press the Indian government” to end all restrictions in Kashmir.

She was also one of the key US Congress members who expressed her concerns over the human rights situation in Jammu and Kashmir during the House Foreign Affairs Committee hearings in South Asia in October.

Jayapal, along with 13 other Congress members, also raised issues related to the National Register of Citizens in Assam and the situation of minorities in India at the hearings.


Also read: Kashmir, citizenship law figure in talks between Jaishankar & Pompeo during 2+2 meet in US


 

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Ms Pragya Tiwari has tweeted : One of my worst memories of reporting is from a hospital in Srinagar in 2010. Security forces were storming and tear gassing Operation Theatres and ICU as doctors tried to operate victims of horrific pellet injuries. I remember thinking this could never happen anywhere else in India. Here we are. 2. [ Police in Mangalore entered Highlands Hospital yesterday, following protestors. Hospital sources have confirmed that police broke into the hospital ICU and were teargassing anyone in sight. ] 3. So whether it is Kashmir or other contemporary developments, Indian diplomats have a lot on their plate. It does not help to be sanctimonious.

  2. We should not narrow or constrict our diplomatic space abroad. Lots of foreign governments are not accepting, in toto, our point of view on Kashmir. We should continue to engage with them on this issue. The Editorial Board of the Washington Post has a harsh edit on the state of our democracy. Our mission in Washington DC cannot blacklist it. Along with making our case to the world, our diplomatic corps should also be truthfully reporting back to headquarters what they are seeing and hearing about us in their host countries.

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