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Rediff.com  » News » Krishna talks peace with Pak's gorgeous Hina Rabbani
This article was first published 12 years ago

Krishna talks peace with Pak's gorgeous Hina Rabbani

Last updated on: July 27, 2011 16:02 IST

Image: Pakistan's Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar (R) shakes hands with Indian counterpart SM Krishna before their meeting in New Delhi
Photographs: B Mathur/Reuters

India and Pakistan on Wednesday announced additional Confidence Building Measures related to Kashmir, including increasing cross-LoC trading days and expanding travel to include tourism and religious aspects.

Also See: PHOTOS: Pak's glamorous foreign minister

After the "satisfactory" talks between External Affairs Minister S M Krishna and his Pakistani counterpart Hina Rabbani Khar, the two sides also decided to relax permit conditions for travel by people of Jammu and Kashmir to the other side of LoC by having a system of six-month multiple entry.

The two ministers discussed Jammu and Kashmir, counter-terrorism measures, including progress in the Mumbai attacks trial in Pakistan, humanitarian issues, commercial and economic cooperation, Wullar Barrage/Tulbul Navigation Project, Sir Creek, Siachen, peace and security including CBMs and promotion of friendly exchanges.

They also agreed to convene separate meetings of the expert groups on nuclear and conventional CBMs, in Islamabad in September 2011.

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'Our relations are on the right track'


"The Ministers held discussions on the issue of Jammu and Kashmir and agreed to the need for continued discussions, in a purposeful and forward looking manner, with a view  to finding a peaceful solution by narrowing divergences and building convergences," said a joint statement issued after the talks.

Krishna later said, "I must say that I am satisfied at the progress achieved in this round of the resumed dialogue. The outcomes have been as per our expectations...While being fully cognisant of the challenges that lie ahead, I can confidently say that our relations are on the right track."

On Jammu and Kashmir, Krishna said they will continue discussions with a view to finding a peaceful solution by "narrowing divergences and building convergences".

Expressing satisfaction at the outcome of talks, he said the two sides decided that the Foreign Ministers will meet again in Islamabad in the first half of 2012 to review progress in the dialogue process.

'This is indeed a new era of bilateral cooperation'


"We are listening carefully to each other and giving serious consideration to the ideas and proposals from both sides that are on the table. I am also confident about our future course of our relations, which has to be normalised for peace progress and prosperity of our two countries and the region," the External Affairs Minister said.

"This is indeed a new era of bilateral cooperation between the two countries and it is our desire and I believe after having spoken to you (Krishna), that it is the desire and commitment of both the governments to make it an uninterrupted and an uninterpretable process," Khar said.

"We have expressed our satisfaction on holding of subject specific meetings during the last five months. We have agreed that the process should continue and in fact there is no alternative to dialogue and constructive engagement," she said in a brief press stake-out after the meeting.

She said, "a new generation of India and Pakistan will see a relationship which is going to be much different then the one we experienced in the last few decades."

'As a responsible state we take ownership of our own affairs'


Khar, the youngest and first woman Foreign Minister of Pakistan, said they should make every effort possible to narrowing down divergences and building convergences.

"It is important that as a responsible state we take ownership of our own affairs. In the recent months we have seen an intensification of contacts at different levels between both the countries," she said.

The joint statement said the ministers affirmed the importance of carrying forward the dialogue process with a "view to resolving peacefully all outstanding issues through constructive and result oriented engagement, and to establish friendly, cooperative and good neighbourly relations between Pakistan and India."

They also underlined the need for sustained effort by both countries to build a relationship of trust and mutually beneficial cooperation in conformity with the determination of the people of both countries to see "an end to terrorism and violence and to realise their aspirations for peace and development."

They noted with satisfaction the fact that "since the resumption of dialogue earlier this year, the process of release of prisoners and fishermen from both sides has continued."