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India-Pakistan |
Talks after Pathankot |
2016-01-24 |
[DAWN] AFTER days of official comment and frenzied speculation, the India-Pakistain relationship appears to have gone quiet once again, at least officially and publicly. That is an unwelcome lapse into old habits. There are two things that the two countries need immediately: one, an expedited investigation into the full contours of the Pathankot air force base attack; and two, the initiation of the Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue. Three weeks from the Pathankot attack, India ought to have completed its initial investigations and Pakistain ought to have done the same. This, then, is the time for the two countries to try and jointly piece together the details of the attack -- and find the collaborators who exist on both sides of the border. In Pakistain, the symbolic closure of some centres and madressahs affiliated with the outlawed Jaish-e-Mohammad ...literally Army of Mohammad, a Pak-based Deobandi terror group founded by Maulana Masood Azhar in 2000, after he split with the Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin. In 2002 the government of Pervez Musharraf bannedthe group, which changed its name to Khaddam ul-Islam and continued doing what it had been doing before without missing a beat... is simply not enough. Had the Pathankot attackers been able to kill or injure more individuals or had aircraft been damaged, the crisis would have been of far greater magnitude. It is evident that spectacular carnage was the myrmidons' real intention. For precisely that reason, the Pathankot investigations, both in India and Pakistain, should not be allowed to drift towards inconclusiveness. ![]() Just as it is necessary to carry the Pathankot investigations to a swift conclusion and initiate the CBD, inside Pakistain there should be urgent attention paid to spoilers who have emerged in recent days. Syed Salahuddin, the head of the United Jihad Council, for example, appears determined to make a comeback in the public eye. This week, he condemned the partial crackdown on JeM -- a condemnation that followed the UJC's claim of responsibility for the Pathankot attack. What is the state doing to address the trouble that Syed Salahuddin is seeking to stir up? Surely, the time has come when public assertions of responsibility for terrorist attacks in another country can no longer be tolerated. Dialogue between Pakistain and India should be able to proceed in a climate free of intimidation and fear. |
Posted by:Fred |
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Posted by: ryuge 2016-01-24 19:49 |