Pakistan may want to de-link violence in Jammu
and Kashmir from the joint anti-terror mechanism with India, but New Delhi
is determined to keep raising "Kashmir-related terror" in official meetings.
"They may try to back away. But all terror incidents in territories of India
are very much within the scope of the joint mechanism," a high-level
official source told IANS.
"We will like to remind Pakistan to honour the Jan 6, 2004 pledge it has
given not to allow its territory to be used for terrorism against India,"
the source added. "Infrastructure of terrorism still exists in
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. And we will raise Kashmir incidents in the
mechanism."
"Investigation of past incidents will lead to the prevention of future
attacks," the source explained, when pointed out that Islamabad's emphasis
on focusing on preventing future terrorist attacks instead of the ones that
have already taken place in which India suspects the involvement of
Pakistan-based nationals.
"The emphasis is on preventing future attacks and to share specific
information on the basis of which both sides can help each other," Pakistan
Foreign Secretary Riaz Mohammad Khan said at a joint press conference with
his Indian counterpart Shivshankar Menon here Wednesday after the two
countries decided on launching a cross-border bus and truck service.
For the first time since the two countries agreed in Havana in September
last year to set up a joint working group on stepping up counter-terrorism
cooperation, Pakistan publicly stated its opposition to discussing the
violence in Jammu and Kashmir within the ambit of the mechanism.
Khan said Wednesday that since Jammu and Kashmir was "disputed", it should
not be "mixed" up with any initiative between India and Pakistan.
But Pakistan has made politically correct noises about bolstering the
anti-terror mechanism, whose mandate is to identify and implement
counter-terrorism initiatives and investigations and prevent future terror
attacks in India.
In a sign that both countries want to give the mechanism space to be
effective, the foreign secretaries also stressed that confidentiality on
evidence about terror attacks exchanged between them holds the key to the
success of the joint framework.
"Exchanges would be of a confidential nature. The mandate is quite clear.
Its first and foremost objective is to prevent future terrorist attacks,"
Khan said.
In his reply to BJP leader L.K. Advani asking him about the course of
India-Pakistan peace process, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also stressed on
"not conducting diplomacy in public". He also said in New Delhi that the
dialogue with Pakistan could make no meaningful progress unless Islamabad
honored in "letter and spirit" its January 2004 commitment on checking
terrorism.
India Wednesday gave Pakistan a list of 19 passport numbers of those killed
in the Samjhauta Express train blast last month and sought details about
them, saying some of them might be involved in the crime.
--IANS