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Imran Khan says Pakistan govt and military are on same page, want to mend ties with India

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Pakistan PM Imran Khan said that the ‘only problem’ Pakistan has with India is over the Kashmir dispute.

Karachi: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan said his political party and the nation’s powerful military are “all on one page” in wanting to mend ties with arch-rival India.

“We want to move forward, we want a civilized relationship,” Khan said in a speech on Wednesday while opening a border crossing with India for Sikh pilgrims in Punjab. The former cricket star reiterated his July election victory pledge that “if India takes one step forward, then we will take two steps forward toward friendship.”

The loosening of border controls for the pilgrims is “a step towards peace which our region needs,” Pakistan’s Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa said while attending the Kartarpur Corridor ceremony.

The military in Pakistan is the nation’s most powerful institution and has directly ruled the country for large parts of its 71-year-history. Having fought three major wars with its bigger neighbour since the partition of British India in 1947, much of Pakistan’s military thinking is directed by the fear of Indian encirclement, thwarting many attempts at outreach and peace in the past. Both nations routinely accuse the other of supporting cross-border insurgencies.

Kashmir dispute

New Delhi has so far been reluctant to engage substantially with Islamabad. Previous disbelief in India over Khan’s promises speaks to what analysts say is a fundamental truth about Pakistan. The country’s key foreign and national security policies are decided by Pakistan’s powerful generals, who were accused of engineering Khan’s assent to power — charges the top brass and the former cricket star deny.

The main dispute is over the contested region of Kashmir that was split during partition and which both nations claim in full.

In September, India’s foreign minister pulled out of planned talks with her Pakistani counterpart after violence flared in Kashmir, which New Delhi blamed on Pakistan-based militants. It would have been the nuclear-armed neighbours’ first senior-level talks in three years. Instead, they traded barbs from the United Nations General Assembly podium.

In his speech, Khan said Pakistan’s “only problem” with India is Kashmir, “the resolution of which only takes us two determined leaders across the border.”

Mumbai attacks

Yet a decade after the Mumbai attacks, India has sought to highlight that the leaders the militant outfit that carried out the assault, Lashkar-e-Taiba, are still at large and living openly in Pakistan.

A spokesman for India’s foreign ministry said it was “deeply regrettable” that Khan has used the occasion of the pilgrim border opening to make a political statement on the status of Kashmir.

Pakistan must also “take effective and credible action to stop providing shelter and all kind of support to cross-border terrorism from territories under its control,” they said. –Bloomberg

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1 COMMENT

  1. PM Imran Khan made a fine speech. He linked peace between the two countries to their shared imperative to remove the scourge of mass poverty, something, he said with admiration, China has achieved in thirty years. Before him, PM Nawaz Sharif too was in favour of better relations, as was Asif Zardari. Mainstream political parties in Pakistan actually put peace with India into their election manifestos, which suggests there is no widespread hatred for India and Indians amongst common Pakistanis. After the general election, an effort should be made to resume the composite dialogue. To believe that Kashmir is not an issue – or the “ core issue “ as Pakistan puts it – is delusional.

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