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Zardari's Ajmer trip a message against extremism: US media

April 09, 2012 11:19 IST
Describing Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari's India visit as a trip "heavy on symbolism if not on substance", the United States media on Monday said his pilgrimage to the shrine of Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer sent a message against Islamist extremism.

"No breakthroughs were announced, but both sides hailed the meeting as a sign of easing tensions along one of the world's most dangerous borders," The Los Angeles Times reported in a news dispatch from New Delhi. "Sunday's one-day visit was heavy on symbolism if not on substance," the daily said.

The Los Angeles Times along with The Washington Post and The New York Times made specific mention of the Zardari's invitation to Dr Singh to visit to Pakistan.

"The question now is how soon Mr Singh will be able to visit Pakistan, a trip that many analysts regard as instrumental to any major diplomatic breakthroughs," The New York Times reported.

"Since taking office nearly eight years ago, he has often voiced a desire to visit Pakistan, but he has yet to make the trip, either because of political considerations at home or because of fraught relations between the countries," it added.

"If nothing else, Zardari's pilgrimage to the marble-domed Sufi shrine in Ajmer, a town in the western state of Rajasthan, sent a message against Islamist extremism," The Washington Post said.

Suicide bombers in Pakistan have repeatedly targeted worshippers at the graves of Sufi saints in a campaign to forward militants' views that the sites violate Islamic tenets, it said.

"It is a bold statement by Pakistan's President Zardari to come to this shrine at a time when there are fears of hardliners taking over everywhere," said Salim Mahajan, an Indian activist for Sufism, was quoted as saying. "It is a good signal he is sending about the tolerant and assimilative form of Islam," he added.

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