Sify Mail
Login | Register
   Beta  |  Slide Shows  |   Columns  |  India news  |  Cities  |  World news  |  Offbeat   |  Features  |  Haiti quake news  |  Terror Map  |  Videos   |  Latest news
Sify Home>>News>> One year on, India-Pakistan chill deepens (One Year After 26/11)
Comments Share Print  |  Rate 
IANS

One year on, India-Pakistan chill deepens (One Year After 26/11)

2009-11-27 08:40:00

26-28, 2008 - three days that took India-Pakistan ties from a high note of hope to a crashing low. One year on, after seven dossiers given by India linking Pakistani militants to the Mumbai terror strike, reminders about bringing the attackers to justice and two meetings between leaders of the two countries, the dialogue process remains in deep freeze.

Hours before terrorists struck Mumbai on the night of Nov 26 -- to begin a 60-hour terror siege that killed 166 people -- Indian External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee and his Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi were posing before photographers in New Delhi and declaring their conviction that the peace process was irreversible.

A little while later, 10 Pakistani terrorists blew away that feel-good picture of bonhomie and subcontinental camaraderie.

The chill set in deep in the weeks that followed with the Pakistani spin machinery accusing India of troops build-up and New Delhi denying the charges.

India launched an unprecedented exercise to mobilise international opinion to pressure Pakistan into acting against the perpetrators of the carnage.

Under global pressure and the US throwing its weight behind India, Pakistan started token crackdowns on terror outfits and banned the Jamaat- ud-Dawa, a front for the Lashker-e-Taiba, the chief suspect behind the Mumbai attacks, and put its founder Hafiz Saeed under house arrest.

On Jan 5, India submitted the first dossier providing to Pakistan extensive evidence and leads establishing the complicity of Pakistani nationals in the Mumbai attacks. In response, Pakistan raised 30 questions. New Delhi also responded, but with little by way of action from the Pakistani side.

Finally, on Feb 12, Islamabad made a dramatic confession, admitting that Pakistani nationals were involved, the first time it has done so in a terror attack in India.

Pakistani security agencies arrested two top Lashkar men, Zarar Shah and Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, and rounded up several others. New Delhi thought this was just the tip of the iceberg and pressed for more concrete action to bring the perpetrators to justice.

Nearly seven months after 26/11, a limited thaw began when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met President Asif Ali Zardari on the sidelines of a multilateral summit in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg.

With cameras flashing and journalists noting every word, Manmohan Singh told Zardari bluntly that he had a limited mandate to tell him that Pakistani territory couldn't be allowed to be used for terror attacks against India. The two leaders directed their foreign secretaries to assess action taken by Islamabad in punishing the Mumbai attackers and report to the two leaders before the NAM summit at Sharm el-Sheikh in July.

A month later, Pakistan sprang a surprise with a dossier listing actions taken by it in prosecuting the Mumbai terrorists just a day before Manmohan Singh sat down for talks with Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in Sharm el-Sheikh.

Manmohan Singh found Pakistani actions credible enough and, in a gesture of much-misunderstood statesmanship, decided to give the Pakistani leadership some space to prosecute the Mumbai terror managers by agreeing to delink Islamabad's action against terror from the composite dialogue process.

In an apparent move to provide Pakistan's beleaguered civilian leadership some leeway with the powerful hawkish military establishment, he also agreed to include the first-ever reference to Balochistan in an India-Pakistan joint statement.

The opposition in India quickly pounced on the Sharm el-Sheikh joint statement and accused Manmohan Singh of capitulating to Pakistan and surrendering national interests.

Manmohan Singh defended the move, clarifying that there was nothing in the joint statement to suggest that India will resume composite dialogue with Pakistan without visible anti-terror actions.

The controversy, however, did not die, prompting New Delhi to revert to its old position of 'no talks till Pakistan acts'.

Manmohan Singh's gamble, however, has not paid off, with Islamabad, in New Delhi's opinion, not doing enough on the Mumbai front despite concessions at Sharm el-Sheikh.

The foreign ministers of the two countries met again in New York in September, but the talks ended in a stalemate of sorts, with little prospect of a revival of the dialogue process.

A year on, Pakistan feels it has done enough and cites the beginning of the trial of seven Mumbai suspects to make a renewed pitch for the resumption of dialogue.

In an interview with IANS on the eve of the anniversary of the 26/11 attacks, Pakistan's High Commissioner to India Shahid Malik insisted Pakistan has taken concrete steps and contended that India should not allow one individual, Saeed, to hijack the entire relationship.

'On Oct 10, we started the trial of the seven accused. That was a big step forward. That should have gone well in India. In addition, 13 persons have been declared proclaimed offenders. We have requested Interpol to trace them,' Malik said.

New Delhi is, however, not convinced. India has voiced its growing exasperation by attacking the 'tardy pace of investigations' and has put Pakistan to the 'Hafiz Saeed test', seeing a sign of Islamabad's insincerity in its reluctance to act against the alleged mastermind of the Mumbai carnage. A Lahore court freed Saeed, citing lack of evidence against him.

Late last month, for three consecutive days, Manmohan Singh again extended the 'hand of friendship' to Pakistan by saying there were 'no preconditions' for resuming dialogue, but linked such a prospect to Islamabad's action against terror.

The foreign ministers of the two countries are expected to meet again in the Trinidadian capital of Port of Spain Nov 28, but no one is expecting a breakthrough.

Earlier, Gilani was expected to attend the summit but appears to have opted out for domestic reasons.

The pattern of India giving fresh evidence, followed by Pakistan's demand for more proof, has not ceased with New Delhi handing over the seventh dossier Nov 17. The long night of Nov 26 continues to cast shadows over India-Pakistan relations, and there is no sign of daybreak, a year after bilateral ties hurtled into a free fall.

(27-11-2009-Manish Chand can be contacted at manish.c@ians.in)

 
 
All about: National

Comments Share Print  |  Rate  More Headlines
 

ADVERTISEMENT
Video Gallery
 
Eleven activists,including two members o..
Anand Sharma seeks gulf investment in In..
Maoists set afire a tractor and truck at..
Maoists blow up a railway track in Oriss..
SC refuses to lift ban on construction o..
More
 

Most Read

  • Chavan threatens to withdraw Uddhavs sec...
    • 3 hours and 31 minutesIANS

      Mumbai Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan on Tuesday night ordered Shiv Sena activists to "behave themselves" after they attacked several cinema halls that would screen Shah Rukh Khans latest

  • Students on rampage in Patna one shot de...
    • 3 hours and 31 minutesPTI

      Patna A person was killed and at least ten people including three policemen were injured on Tuesday as students went on a rampage burnt police motorcycles and threw stones at some private

  • Why I hate porn
    • 3 hours and 31 minutesSIFY

      Salil JoseAshok name changed was an engineering student at a famous college in the city. He was staying at a nondescript lodge where he shared rooms with one of his seniors in the college. This

  • Porn not a problem
    • 3 hours and 31 minutesSIFY

      Nagarajan ChelliahRecently the Chief Justice of India K G Balakrishnan brought to focus the issue of cyber crime. While financial fraud is a big problem the spread of hate messages could threaten

  • Iran starts 20-percent uranium enrichmen...
    • 3 hours and 31 minutesIANS

      Tehran/Vienna Iran on Tuesday started the 20-percent uranium enrichment process the head of the countrys Atomic Energy Organization said. "The process started in the research hall in the Natanz

Today's Discussion
Is Thackeray's demand justified?
Tell us
women section
Sponsor Ads
Leave a Comment
Post Your
Comments
   
  Click to login using
your Facebook account
Latest Comments
Showing 1-2 of total 2 messages 1  
Posted by agthagola on Nov 27,2009 22:49 PM
Well the real issue between two countries is KASHMIR. India can wish that it will go away but it is worsening over time. Playing games like Bobay hapening will not help the cuase. India has get to the bottom line, referendum in Kashmir for the people to decide if they want to be the part of PK or india. I see a big success for india if kashmir join Pakistan. Then millitants will lose their cause and soon both countries can make a common market, since people are same culturally. However if India continue to play games then PK will continue to grow its power and China and PK jointly will be major player in world affairs. However I believe india just seek narrow goals and will be unable to solve this problem. Will continue to lock its horns with PK and lose the oppertunity to be big player on world stage. While China will build its relations with PK and through PK all Muslim world will be with it. If Indian leaders have some foresight they need to let Kashmir decide their fate, which unfortunatley is completely lacking in indian leadership.
Post your Reply | Forward | Report Abuse
Posted by Dinesh on Nov 27,2009 20:15 PM
Some of Pak Political Analysts started propoganda that 26/11 was a conspiracy like 9/11.
Post your Reply | Forward | Report Abuse | View Reply (1)
1  
© Copyright Sify Technologies Ltd, 1998-2010. All rights reserved. India News Portal, Sify.com hosted at SifyHosting India's first Level 3 Internet Data Centre.
Site optimized for Internet Explorer 5.5 and above.
See Disclaimer | Privacy Policy & Parental Guidance on pornography | careers@sify | About Us | Feedback | Advertise