Deccan Chronicle

Jaitley, Pak minister share cold vibes

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Yokohama (Japan), May 6: Frosty Indo-Pak relations after the beheading of Indian soldiers by Pakistani troops were on full display here when finance minister Arun Jaitley was on dais with his Pakistani counterpar­t, often sharing cold vibes and aggressive­ly countering Islamabad backing of China’s Belt and Road initiative.

This was the first instance of leaders of the two nations sharing dais in the midst of what is being dubbed as the worst crisis brewing in South Asia since the Mumbai terrorist attacks of 2008.

Jaitley and Pakistan’s finance minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar were among the four speakers on a debate business a news channel organised on Asia's Economic Outlook: Talking Trade on sides of Asian Developmen­t Bank’s 50th annual meet.

The Indian minister sat in a position that his head was turned away from the Pakistani leader all through the one-hour debate and left immediatel­y after a customary photo-op with panel members. There were no warm hand shakes.

Jaitley smiled just once — On a question on US taxi aggregator Uber facing hard times, he smiled and said, “I think they are having a great time in India.”

While no question was put to the two ministers either on the recent tensions or the trade between the two nations, Jaitley did not reply when journalist­s tried to speak to him.

When Dar backed One Belt, One Road (OBOR) initiative to connect China with the rest of Eurasia, Jaitley said India has “serious reservatio­ns” on the proposal because of sovereignt­y issues.

“I think connectivi­ty in principle is a good idea but the particular proposal which has just been suggested by you, I think there are several other collateral issues and this is not really the forum for me to go into all this,” he said.

Stating that the idea is always there for the future as the expansion of connectivi­ty takes place between countries, he said he has “no hesitation in saying that we have serious reservatio­ns about it (OBOR) because of sovereignt­y issues. I don't want to get into it at this stage but there are issues”.

Dar, on the other hand, stated that Pakistan “strongly” supports the initiative.

 ??  ?? Finance Minister Arun Jaitley with his Pakistani counterpar­t (1st R) Ishaq Dar at the ADB annual meeting in Yokohama on Saturday.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley with his Pakistani counterpar­t (1st R) Ishaq Dar at the ADB annual meeting in Yokohama on Saturday.

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