Yahoo – AFP,
25 December 2015
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Indian
Prime Minister, Narendra Modi (R) shakes hands with Pakistan
Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif upon his arrival in Lahore on December 25,
2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Lahore
(Pakistan) (AFP) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a surprise
"goodwill" visit to arch-rival Pakistan on Friday, with the first
such trip in a decade seen as a step towards normalising ties between the
nuclear-armed neighbours.
Modi, who announced
the trip via Twitter while in Kabul, met in Lahore with his Pakistani
counterpart Nawaz Sharif, who was celebrating his birthday and the wedding of a
grand-daughter, for a two-and-a-half hour visit seen by analysts as a positive
step.
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Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L)
and Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
meet
in Lahore on December 25, 2015
(AFP Photo)
|
Television
footage showed an Indian Air Force jumbo jet land at Lahore's Allama Iqbal
International Airport in the late afternoon on Friday, moments after Sharif
himself arrived by helicopter.
The
Pakistani premier, flanked by his cabinet ministers, received Modi on the
tarmac where military officers lined up along a red carpet.
Both
leaders wore their national dress and made their way to Sharif's helicopter,
which flew them to the Pakistani leader's palatial residence south of the city.
They were
seen smiling as they walked alongside each other and chatted in Sharif's living
room.
Shortly
thereafter, Modi was seen off by Sharif at the airport.
'Purely
goodwill'
Pakistan's
Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry later told a news conference that it was
a "purely goodwill visit".
"Both
leaders agreed that it was extremely important that the leaders of both
countries should understand each other's point of view so that the doors of
prosperity could open for their people," Chaudhry said.
He said
Modi gave Sharif birthday greetings and the meeting took place in a
"cordial atmosphere", and added that the two countries' foreign
secretaries will meet in Islamabad next month.
Senior
Indian officials and politicians also spoke positively of the meeting, with
foreign ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup tweeting that the meeting had set a
"positive spirit in the neighbourhood".
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Activists
of the Indian Youth Congress in New Delhi burn a poster of Indian
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi to protest his visit to Pakistan on December 25,
2015
(AFP Photo/Chandan Khanna)
|
Foreign
Minister Sushma Swaraj, meanwhile, tweeted: "Neighbours' relations should
be like this."
The last
visit to Pakistan by an Indian prime minister was in 2004 by then leader Atal
Bihari Vajpayee, who is credited with bringing about a thaw in relations with
Islamabad.
Modi and
Sharif have had a stop-start diplomatic relationship since the Indian premier's
surprise invitation to Sharif to his inauguration in May 2014.
Initial
optimism about a revival of ties was short-lived as the two countries traded
heavy fire across their disputed border in the Himalayan territory of Kashmir
which claimed dozens of lives on both sides.
But this
month, they agreed to resume high-level talks that would cover peace and
security as well as territorial disputes, including over Kashmir.
'Extremely welcome move'
A brief
meeting on November 30 between the two leaders on the sidelines of the UN
climate summit in Paris, followed by talks between the two countries' national
security advisers in Bangkok, appeared to have broken the ice.
It was
unclear, however, when Modi's visit itself was planned.
And though
officials have remained tight-lipped about the agenda, the meeting was hailed
by regional observers.
"It's
an extremely welcome move and it shows that the baby steps promised at the
Paris summit between the two prime ministers have transformed into a much
bigger step, which holds big promise for both countries," said Imtiaz Gul,
head of the Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies.
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Pakistani
security personnel stand guard during the arrival of Indian Prime
Minister
Narendra Modi at the Allama Iqbal International Airport in Lahore on
December
25, 2015 (AFP Photo/Arif Ali)
|
Earlier Friday,
in a speech to the Afghan parliament, Modi urged closer cooperation between
India, Pakistan and other neighbours over Afghanistan.
He also
made a veiled reference to Pakistan on the issue of cross-border terrorism in
Afghanistan.
"Afghanistan
will succeed only when terrorism no longer flows across the border, when
nurseries and sanctuaries of terrorism are shut, and their patrons are no
longer in business," Modi said.
India's
main opposition Congress party, however, was quick to criticise Modi's
"irresponsible" decision.
In
Pakistan, opposition senator Sherry Rehman said that while most Pakistanis
backed better ties, parliament had not been consulted and it was unclear what
concessions Islamabad was ready to make.
"It's
a small step because we don't know what kind of sustainable progress is based
around it. We don't know if this is more than a grand gesture," she told
AFP.
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