INT2
International/
Diplomacy/
Terrorism/Indo-pakIndia,
Pakistan can jointly combat terror: PM LeadBy Manish ChandOn Board Air
India One, Sep 24 IANS A day before he meets
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari here,
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said Tuesday he would
will ask Zardari to
address the issue of cross-border terror, but underlined that both
countries could covert this "common challenge" into an opportunity to jointly combat
terrorism. "There are enormous challenges ahead for both
India and
Pakistan. We are to see how peace can be brought and how we can
work together," Manmohan Singh told
reporters aboard his special
aircraft on his way to New
York."
India-
Pakistan relations are about challenges. We
face common challenges and we
will seek to convert them into opportunities," the
prime minister said when asked about his agenda for talks with Zardari. Manmohan Singh
will meet Zardari at the United Nations headquarters in New
York Wednesday on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly - the first
meeting between them since Zardari became the president early this month. This
will also be their first
meeting since the serial blasts in Delhi and the attack on Marriot
Hotel in the
heart of Islamabad last week. "That is among the challenges we have to meet," the
prime minister said when asked whether he
will take up the issue of continuing cross-border
terrorism with Zardari. Lauding the "advent of
democracy in Pakistan", the
prime minister set a positive tone for the talks, saying: "We are looking forward to working together."
India concedes that
Pakistan, too, is a
victim of
terrorism but feels strongly that it did not detract from its alleged complicity in terror attacks in
India. This is the no- nonsense message on cross-border
terrorism Manmohan Singh
will convey to Zardari, the widower of former
prime minister Benazir Butto who was killed in a
suicide attack last year. Besides cross-border
terrorism, increasing Line of Control LoC ceasefire violations, infiltration and the July 7 bombing of the
Indian embassy in Kabul
will figure prominently in Manmohan Singh's talks with Zardari. The two leaders are also likely to announce the start of cross-border
trade through Jammu and
Kashmir, expected to begin Oct 1. Manmohan Singh
will remind Zardari of Pakistan's Jan 6, 2004, commitment not to allow its territory to be used for anti-
India terror and take up the bombing of the
Indian embassy in Kabul for which
New Delhi has blamed Pakistan's spy agency Inter-
Services Intelligence ISI, an official source said. The
prime minister will also ask Zaradri to use his influence to stem the flow of cross-border terror which
New Delhi feels is being masterminded by the ISI, the source added. Manmohan Singh's
meeting with Zardari would be an occasion to give a push to the languishing peace process between the two
countries and
will give
New Delhi a sense of Zardari's position in the evolving civil-
military equations in
Pakistan. --Indo-Asian
News Servicemc/sk/rn520
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