INT60
International/
Diplomacy/Indo-pak Zardari's
comments on
Kashmir not what he meant:
Pakistan foreign
secretary Beijing, Oct 24 IANS Nearly three weeks after President Asif Ali Zardari's remarks describing militants in Jammu and
Kashmir as terrorists, Pakistan's Foreign
Secretary Salman Basheer
Friday downplayed the
comments that were seen in
India as a reversal of Islamabad's
policy on
Kashmir, even as he called for rooting out
terrorism collectively. "What is attributed to him Zardari on
terrorism is not what he meant. We have to look at the issue of violence and militancy wherever it is and whatever form it takes," Basheer told
reporters on the sidelines of the seventh summit of the
Asia-
Europe Meeting ASEM in the
Chinese capital. "The definition of
terrorism has not been spelt out satisfactorily. The question is how we can
all work collectively to get rid of it.
Pakistan is doing a lot," Basheer stressed. This is, however, not the first time
Pakistan has officially denied Zardari's remarks on
Kashmir due to the fear of a backlash by hawks and anti-
India groups in
Pakistan who see insurgency in
Kashmir as a "freedom struggle". In an interview to the
Wall Street Journal earlier this month, Zardari admitted that
India is not a threat to his
country and described the militants operating in Jammu and
Kashmir as terrorists, remarks made perhaps for the first time by a top Pakistani leader that was seen in New
Delhi as a change in the stance of
Pakistan on the crucial issue of
terrorism. "
India has never been a threat to
Pakistan. I, for one, and our democratic
government is not scared of
Indian influence abroad," he had told the
newspaper. Zardari spoke of the militant groups operating in
Kashmir as "terrorists", noting that former president Pervez Musharraf would more likely have called them "freedom fighters". Basheer was, however, cautious when asked about Pakistan's reaction to the announcement of
elections in Jammu and
Kashmir. "There have been some reactions locally and we are following that. You
India are
moving towards general
elections and it is something we have nothing to say about at this point in time," he said.
India welcomed Zardari's statement, saying it had been "made, perhaps, for the first time by a top Pakistani leader which is in contrast with its earlier position of terming militants as jehadis". Top strategic experts in
India also hailed Zardari's remarks and interpreted it as a tectonic shift in Pakistan's traditional position on
Kashmir. --Indo-Asian
News Service mk-mc/rn/jg 436
Words * 24102022