After talks
between Pakistani President Zardari and Indian PM Singh in Tehran, observers
say Indo-Pakistani relations won't improve until Islamabad severs all ties with
the militant Lashkar-e-Taiba organization.
On
Thursday, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told Pakistani President Asif
Ali Zardari on the sidelines of the Non-Aligned Movement summit in Tehran that
New Delhi wanted a speedy trial of the seven people who are being held in
Pakistan in connection with the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
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| Kasab was found guilty on more than 80 charges, including murder and waging war on India |
Singh
reiterated India's position that the fair trial of these people was a necessary
step for the improvement of relations between India and Pakistan.
On
Wednesday, the Indian Supreme Court upheld the death sentence of the 24-year-old
Pakistani citizen Ajmal Kasab, the sole surviving gunman of the 2008 Mumbai
attacks (also known as 26/11 attacks). Kasab was one of the ten gunmen who
carried out the coordinated attacks in various parts of India's financial
capital Mumbai in 2008, killing 166 people.
For months
Islamabad denied that Pakistan or Pakistani organizations had any involvement
in the 26/11 attacks. However, in 2009, Pakistani authorities arrested seven
people, including Zaki-ur-Rahman Lakhvi of the banned Pakistani militant group
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), for their alleged role in them.
On
Thursday, the US placed sanctions on eight Pakistani citizens allegedly linked
with Lashkar-e-Taiba.
"The
individuals targeted today include LeT members based in Pakistan who are
involved in LeT's propaganda campaigns, financial networks, and logistic
support networks," the US Treasury said in a statement.
Differing
viewpoints
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| Pakistan initially denied that Kasab was its citizen |
Peace talks
between India and Pakistan had completely broken off after the Mumbai attacks
and resumed only last year.
This was
the second meeting between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Asif Ali
Zardari this year. Last time, the two leaders met in New Delhi in April when
President Zardari made a day-long private visit to India.
Indian
Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai told the media that the main focus of the
Singh-Zardari Tehran meeting was on terrorism-related matters. He said that PM
Singh "pressed for an expeditious conclusion in the 26/11 trial and said
action taken in this sphere would be a major confidence-building measure
(between India and Pakistan).
On his
part, Pakistani President Zardari said that both countries needed to "move
beyond the reiteration of positions to more substantive results."
"We
have covered a lot of ground but we still have to go a long way," Zardari
told the press after his meeting with Manmohan Singh. Zardari also said that he
was looking forward to hosting PM Singh in Pakistan at an "early
date."
The foreign
secretaries of the two countries are expected to meet in Islamabad in
September.
No action
against Lashkar-e-Taiba
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| Hafiz Saeed also heads the Islamic charitable organization known as Jamaat-ud-Dawa |
Political
experts say that relations between India and Pakistan have slightly improved
but that no real breakthrough can be achieved until Pakistan acts against LeT.
"India
and Pakistan are not on the same page in terms of prioritizing their key
issues. For Pakistan, the resolution of the Kashmir dispute is the biggest
demand, whereas India considers Pakistan-based Islamic extremism the main
problem," Malik Siraj Akbar, a Pakistan expert at the National Endowment
for Democracy in Washington DC, told DW.
Akbar
further said that it was evident that Pakistan was still supporting LeT.
"Lashkar's
chief Hafiz Saeed regularly appears on Pakistani television and makes public
speeches enticing violence against India. I don't think that Pakistan is
showing commitment to act against LeT. Such impunity granted to Hafiz Saeed has
hurt the Indian confidence in Pakistan."
Akbar said
that the Tehran meeting should not be mistaken for consensus on important
issues between Islamabad and New Delhi and that a lot more needed to be done.
On his
part, Pakistani peace activist and researcher Nizamuddin Nizamani told DW that
the Pakistani government did not want to accept its own responsibility but
rather blame "non state actors" for Mumbai attacks.
Improved
bilateral trade
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| India has recently allowed direct investments from Pakistan |
For the
improvement of Indo-Pakistani ties, both countries' civil societies had to
exert more pressure on their governments, said Nizamani, adding that it was
encouraging that India and Pakistan were focusing on trade relations as well.
"The
Pakistani government has given India the status of the Most Favored Nation
(MFN) in terms of trade. I think it is a big step. India has also allowed
direct Pakistani investment in its market. I also think that the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) can also play a big role in making
things better between Pakistan and India," said Nizamani.
Peace
activists in India and Pakistan say there is no alternative to trade and
"people-to-people" contact between the two hostile neighbors, which,
in their view, can defeat warmongers and extremist groups on both sides of the
border.





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